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Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue

An understanding of tissue data variability in relation to processing techniques during and postsurgery would be desirable when testing surgical specimens for clinical diagnostics, drug development, or identification of predictive biomarkers. Specimens of normal and colorectal cancer (CRC) tissues r...

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Autores principales: David, Kerstin A., Unger, Florian T., Uhlig, Philipp, Juhl, Hartmut, Moore, Helen M., Compton, Carolyn, Nashan, Björn, Dörner, Arnulf, de Weerth, Andreas, Zornig, Carsten
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4294341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25526028
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author David, Kerstin A.
Unger, Florian T.
Uhlig, Philipp
Juhl, Hartmut
Moore, Helen M.
Compton, Carolyn
Nashan, Björn
Dörner, Arnulf
de Weerth, Andreas
Zornig, Carsten
author_facet David, Kerstin A.
Unger, Florian T.
Uhlig, Philipp
Juhl, Hartmut
Moore, Helen M.
Compton, Carolyn
Nashan, Björn
Dörner, Arnulf
de Weerth, Andreas
Zornig, Carsten
author_sort David, Kerstin A.
collection PubMed
description An understanding of tissue data variability in relation to processing techniques during and postsurgery would be desirable when testing surgical specimens for clinical diagnostics, drug development, or identification of predictive biomarkers. Specimens of normal and colorectal cancer (CRC) tissues removed during colon and liver resection surgery were obtained at the beginning of surgery and postsurgically, tissue was fixed at 10, 20, and 45 minutes. Specimens were analyzed from 50 patients with primary CRC and 43 with intrahepatic metastasis of CRC using a whole genome gene expression array. Additionally, we focused on the epidermal growth factor receptor pathway and quantified proteins and their phosphorylation status in relation to tissue processing timepoints. Gene and protein expression data obtained from colorectal and liver specimens were influenced by tissue handling during surgery and by postsurgical processing time. To obtain reliable expression data, tissue processing for research and diagnostic purposes needs to be highly standardized.
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spelling pubmed-42943412015-01-21 Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue David, Kerstin A. Unger, Florian T. Uhlig, Philipp Juhl, Hartmut Moore, Helen M. Compton, Carolyn Nashan, Björn Dörner, Arnulf de Weerth, Andreas Zornig, Carsten Oncotarget Priority Research Paper An understanding of tissue data variability in relation to processing techniques during and postsurgery would be desirable when testing surgical specimens for clinical diagnostics, drug development, or identification of predictive biomarkers. Specimens of normal and colorectal cancer (CRC) tissues removed during colon and liver resection surgery were obtained at the beginning of surgery and postsurgically, tissue was fixed at 10, 20, and 45 minutes. Specimens were analyzed from 50 patients with primary CRC and 43 with intrahepatic metastasis of CRC using a whole genome gene expression array. Additionally, we focused on the epidermal growth factor receptor pathway and quantified proteins and their phosphorylation status in relation to tissue processing timepoints. Gene and protein expression data obtained from colorectal and liver specimens were influenced by tissue handling during surgery and by postsurgical processing time. To obtain reliable expression data, tissue processing for research and diagnostic purposes needs to be highly standardized. Impact Journals LLC 2014-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4294341/ /pubmed/25526028 Text en Copyright: © 2014 David et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Priority Research Paper
David, Kerstin A.
Unger, Florian T.
Uhlig, Philipp
Juhl, Hartmut
Moore, Helen M.
Compton, Carolyn
Nashan, Björn
Dörner, Arnulf
de Weerth, Andreas
Zornig, Carsten
Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
title Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
title_full Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
title_fullStr Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
title_full_unstemmed Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
title_short Surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and EGFR-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
title_sort surgical procedures and postsurgical tissue processing significantly affect expression of genes and egfr-pathway proteins in colorectal cancer tissue
topic Priority Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4294341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25526028
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