z-logo
Premium
Large‐scale integration of microarray data reveals genes and pathways common to multiple cancer types
Author(s) -
Dawany Noor B.,
Dampier Will N.,
Tozeren Aydin
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.25854
Subject(s) - cancer , gene , biology , dna microarray , microarray analysis techniques , microarray , prostate cancer , metastasis , significance analysis of microarrays , computational biology , bioinformatics , cancer research , gene expression , genetics
The global gene expression analysis of cancer and healthy tissues typically results in large numbers of genes that are significantly altered in cancer. Such data, however, has been difficult to interpret due to the high level of variation of gene lists across laboratories and the small sample sizes used in individual studies. In this investigation, we compiled microarray data obtained from the same platform family from 84 laboratories, resulting in a database containing 1,043 healthy tissue samples and 4,900 cancer samples for 13 different tissue types. The primary cancers considered included adrenal gland, brain, breast, cervix, colon, kidney, liver, lung, ovary, pancreas, prostate and skin tissues. We normalized the data together and analyzed subsets for the discovery of genes involved in normal to cancer transformation. Our integrated significance analysis of microarrays approach produced top 400 gene lists for each of the 13 cancer types. These lists were highly statistically enriched with genes already associated with cancer in research publications excluding microarray studies ( p < 1.31 E ‐ 12). The genes MTIM and RRM2 appeared in nine and TOP2A in eight lists of significantly altered genes in cancer. In total, there were 132 genes present in at least four gene lists, 11 of which were not previously associated with cancer. The list contains 17 metal ions and 15 adenyl ribonucleotide binding proteins, six kinases and six transcription factors. Our results point to the value of integrating microarray data in the study of combination drug therapies targeting metastasis.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here