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Published in: Pathology & Oncology Research 3/2008

01-09-2008 | Original Paper

Universal Reference RNA is Not a Representative Normal Sample for Oligonucleotide Microarray Studies

Authors: Wilfrido D. Mojica, Leighton Stein, Lesleyann Hawthorn

Published in: Pathology & Oncology Research | Issue 3/2008

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Abstract

Translational research has been defined as the scientific study using human material that will ultimately generate patient specific data. A major caveat in human directed study is the availability of high quality and quantities of patient derived homogeneous cells for analysis. Whereas there exist sources for which tumor tissue and blood samples can be made available, the same cannot be said for normal tissue. The absence of normal control tissue has led to the creation of pooled cell lines and tissues for purchase known as “reference RNA”. Although initially created for purposes of standardization, the difficulty associated with acquiring normal tissue has led some investigators to use sources of universal pooled RNA for comparative analysis with clinical tissue specimens. In order to study the effects of using Universal Reference RNA on expression profiling experiments we have evaluated the performance of universal RNA compared to RNA obtained from a purified population of colon epithelial cells in defining a set of altered transcripts in colon cancer.
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Metadata
Title
Universal Reference RNA is Not a Representative Normal Sample for Oligonucleotide Microarray Studies
Authors
Wilfrido D. Mojica
Leighton Stein
Lesleyann Hawthorn
Publication date
01-09-2008
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Pathology & Oncology Research / Issue 3/2008
Print ISSN: 1219-4956
Electronic ISSN: 1532-2807
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12253-008-9068-2

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