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Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast

Molecular profiling of primary tumors may facilitate the classification of patients with cancer into more homogenous biological groups to aid clinical management. Metabolomic profiling has been shown to be a powerful tool in characterizing the biological mechanisms underlying a disease but has not b...

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Autores principales: Budhu, Anuradha, Terunuma, Atsushi, Zhang, Geng, Hussain, S. Perwez, Ambs, Stefan, Wang, Xin Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4159687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25210494
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ijbs.9810
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author Budhu, Anuradha
Terunuma, Atsushi
Zhang, Geng
Hussain, S. Perwez
Ambs, Stefan
Wang, Xin Wei
author_facet Budhu, Anuradha
Terunuma, Atsushi
Zhang, Geng
Hussain, S. Perwez
Ambs, Stefan
Wang, Xin Wei
author_sort Budhu, Anuradha
collection PubMed
description Molecular profiling of primary tumors may facilitate the classification of patients with cancer into more homogenous biological groups to aid clinical management. Metabolomic profiling has been shown to be a powerful tool in characterizing the biological mechanisms underlying a disease but has not been evaluated for its ability to classify cancers by their tissue of origin. Thus, we assessed metabolomic profiling as a novel tool for multiclass cancer characterization. Global metabolic profiling was employed to identify metabolites in paired tumor and non-tumor liver (n=60), breast (n=130) and pancreatic (n=76) tissue specimens. Unsupervised principal component analysis showed that metabolites are principally unique to each tissue and cancer type. Such a difference can also be observed even among early stage cancers, suggesting a significant and unique alteration of global metabolic pathways associated with each cancer type. Our global high-throughput metabolomic profiling study shows that specific biochemical alterations distinguish liver, pancreatic and breast cancer and could be applied as cancer classification tools to differentiate tumors based on tissue of origin.
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spelling pubmed-41596872014-09-10 Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast Budhu, Anuradha Terunuma, Atsushi Zhang, Geng Hussain, S. Perwez Ambs, Stefan Wang, Xin Wei Int J Biol Sci Research Paper Molecular profiling of primary tumors may facilitate the classification of patients with cancer into more homogenous biological groups to aid clinical management. Metabolomic profiling has been shown to be a powerful tool in characterizing the biological mechanisms underlying a disease but has not been evaluated for its ability to classify cancers by their tissue of origin. Thus, we assessed metabolomic profiling as a novel tool for multiclass cancer characterization. Global metabolic profiling was employed to identify metabolites in paired tumor and non-tumor liver (n=60), breast (n=130) and pancreatic (n=76) tissue specimens. Unsupervised principal component analysis showed that metabolites are principally unique to each tissue and cancer type. Such a difference can also be observed even among early stage cancers, suggesting a significant and unique alteration of global metabolic pathways associated with each cancer type. Our global high-throughput metabolomic profiling study shows that specific biochemical alterations distinguish liver, pancreatic and breast cancer and could be applied as cancer classification tools to differentiate tumors based on tissue of origin. Ivyspring International Publisher 2014-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4159687/ /pubmed/25210494 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ijbs.9810 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Reproduction is permitted for personal, noncommercial use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Budhu, Anuradha
Terunuma, Atsushi
Zhang, Geng
Hussain, S. Perwez
Ambs, Stefan
Wang, Xin Wei
Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast
title Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast
title_full Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast
title_fullStr Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast
title_short Metabolic Profiles are Principally Different between Cancers of the Liver, Pancreas and Breast
title_sort metabolic profiles are principally different between cancers of the liver, pancreas and breast
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4159687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25210494
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ijbs.9810
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