gms | German Medical Science

27th German Cancer Congress Berlin 2006

German Cancer Society (Frankfurt/M.)

22. - 26.03.2006, Berlin

Common denominator genes that distinguish colorectal carcinoma from normal mucosa

Meeting Abstract

  • corresponding author presenting/speaker Roland Croner - Department of Surgery, University of Erlangen, Deutschland
  • Thomas Förtsch - Department of Surgery, University of Erlangen
  • Wolfgang Brückl - Department of Internal Innere Medicine I, University of Erlangen
  • Klaus Günther - Department of Surgery, University of Erlangen
  • Ludger Klein-Hitpass - Institue of Cell Biology, University of Essen
  • Klaus Matzel - Department of Surgery, University of Erlangen
  • Thomas Papadopoulos - Institute of Pathology, University of Erlangen
  • Thomas Kirchner - Institute of Pathology, University of Erlangen
  • Jürgen Behrens - Department of Experimental Medizin II, University of Erlangen
  • Michael Stürzl - Department of Molecular and Experimental Surgery, University of Erlangen
  • Werner Hohenberger - Department of Surgery, University of Erlangen
  • Bertram Reingruber - Department of Surgery, University of Erlangen

27. Deutscher Krebskongress. Berlin, 22.-26.03.2006. Düsseldorf, Köln: German Medical Science; 2006. DocPO481

The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://www.egms.de/en/meetings/dkk2006/06dkk591.shtml

Published: March 20, 2006

© 2006 Croner et al.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.en). You are free: to Share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work, provided the original author and source are credited.


Outline

Text

Purpose: Microarray technology has been used by a growing number of investigators and several studies have been published which list hundreds of genes differentially expressed by colorectal carcinoma (CRC) and normal mucosa (MC). On the basis of our own and other investigators´ microarray data, our goal was to identify a common denominator gene cluster distinguishing CRC from MC.

Methods: Thirty GeneChips (HG-U133A, Affymetrix) were hybridized, twenty with RNA of CRC stages I-IV (UICC) and ten with MC. Expression signals showing at least a 4 fold difference between CRC and MC (p<0.01) were identified as differentially expressed. In addition, in our integrative data analysis approach only those genes whose expression was altered simultaneously in at least two of five recently published studies were subjected to an unsupervised hierarchical cluster analysis.

Results: We detected 168 up- and 283 down- regulated genes in CRC relative to MC. Twenty-three genes were filtered from the five articles reviewed. An unsupervised hierarchical cluster analysis of these 23 genes confirmed the high specificity of these genes to differentiate between CRC and MC in our microarray data.

Conclusions: CRC and MC could be clearly separated by 23 genes selected for being differentially expressed more than once in a recent literature review. These genes represent a common denominator gene cluster which can be used to distinguish colorectal MC from CRC.