| Literature DB >> 21078204 |
René Stempfer1, Parvez Syed, Klemens Vierlinger, Rudolf Pichler, Eckart Meese, Petra Leidinger, Nicole Ludwig, Albert Kriegner, Christa Nöhammer, Andreas Weinhäusel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The simplicity and potential of minimal invasive testing using serum from patients make auto-antibody based biomarkers a very promising tool for use in diagnostics of cancer and auto-immune disease. Although several methods exist for elucidating candidate-protein markers, immobilizing these onto membranes and generating so called macroarrays is of limited use for marker validation. Especially when several hundred samples have to be analysed, microarrays could serve as a good alternative since processing macro membranes is cumbersome and reproducibility of results is moderate.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21078204 PMCID: PMC2995456 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Pair wise correlation of repeated protein microarray analyses. Pair wise correlation of repeated analyses of serum samples. Log2 transformed unnormalised intensities, with a threshold set to 512 intensity-units (derived from Genepix .gpr files) were used for analyses. Correlation coefficients are given in the paired scatterplots and were above 0.92 upon repetitive analyses. The "filled triangles" represent reactive clones from each individual serum found within membrane-based macroarray testing. Data from repetitive analyses (replicate-1 on x-axes; replicate-2 on y-axes) microarray analyses using serum from brain (left) and lung (right) tumour patients (identifiers of different patient sera on top of each scatter plot) are plotted.
Figure 2Replicate measurements of the top three differentially reactive clones. Performance of the top three differentially reactive clones (B5, E7 and D11 with p-values less than 0.002, 0.01, 0.05, respectively) in replicate experiments. The normalized signal intensity values of these reactive clones across the replicate measurements (replicate-1 and -2) distinguishes between brain (n = 5) and lung (n = 5) cancer serum samples.
Figure 3Multidimensional scaling of protein microarray data of brain and lung tumour patients' sera. Multidimensional scaling using centered correlation of significant antigens derived from class comparison (using 10 most significant antigens). Microarray data as depicted in scatterplots (figure 1) of duplicate analysis of brain (black) and lung (gray) cancer patients' serum samples were used for class comparison.