| Literature DB >> 32703272 |
Priscila D R Cirillo1, Katia Margiotti2, Alvaro Mesoraca1, Claudio Giorlandino3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Circulating cell-free microRNAs (miRNAs) which consist of short-sequence RNAs are released from cells into the blood stream and has emerged as new biomarkers in the clinical cancer diagnosis and treatment. For instance, ovarian cancer comprises one of the three major malignant tumor types in the female reproductive system. The mortality rate of this cancer is the highest among all gynecological tumors, with ovarian cancer metastasis constituting an important cause of death. Therefore, development of a diagnostic tool that enables the ovarian cancer diagnosis in earlier stages is urgent.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Cancer; Diagnostics; Droplet digital PCR; MicroRNA; Serum
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32703272 PMCID: PMC7379807 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-020-05190-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Optimization of cel-miR-39-3p and UniSp6 spike-ins and assay reproducibility for circulating miR-320a detection. All the 10 serum samples (5 from health-donors and 5 from ovarian cancer patients) were spiked-in with 0.2 nM of cel-miR-39-3p (gray bars) during extraction step and 0.2 µL of UniSp6 (black bars) were add during the cDNA synthesis. a RT-qPCR and b ddPCR were used to quantify the levels of both miRNAs. For the circulating miR-320a quantification, Pearson correlation (r) was applied to 2 independent datasets for all 10 samples to calculate the reproducibility of detection of miR-320a by (c) RT-qPCR and (d) ddPCR. “Day 1” and “Day 2” means two independent experiment (2 independent batches). Ct cycle threshold, C Health-controls, OV ovarian cancer patients
Fig. 2ddPCR quality control parameters for an accurate quantification of circulating miR-320a. All the 10 serum samples (5 from health-donors and 5 from ovarian cancer patients) were submitted to a ddPCR reaction whereas the quality control parameters were evaluated. a Representative 1D plot showing the effect of the annealing temperature at 58 °C and 1 µL of LNA primer volume on the amplitude of positive (blue) and negative (gray) droplets. No template control (NTC) has not positive droplets. b All samples had more than 10,000 total droplets detected even in a single-plex (gray bars), and a minimum number of positive droplets ≥ 3 was considered to call a positive sample for miR-320a detection (pink bars). NTC (Negative Template Control) had 0 droplets indicating no false-positive droplets calling. c, d Bi-dimensional plots showing the “raining droplets” (blue droplets between 3000–8000 amplitude), a typical appearance of positive droplets detected for miRCURY LNA primers combined with EvaGreen-based assays. Around 10,000 amplitude is possible to observe one accumulation of miR-320a positive droplets in ovarian cancer case (d) (OV16) compared to the control (c) (C1). e Absolute quantification (concentration in copies/µL) of miR-320a for all 10 samples. f Mann–Whitney test was applied for all 10 samples for miR-320a quantification after normalization considering the geometric mean of cel-miR-39–39 and UniSp6. The miR-320a expression profile was able to distinguish health-controls from ovarian cancer serum samples (P = 0.037). C Health-controls, OV ovarian cancer patients, RQ Relative quantification. Error bars = Poisson 95% confidence interval. Representative data from 2 independent experiments