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Microarray Technology and Cancer Gene Profiling


Edited By:

Simone Mocellin
University of Padova
Padova, Italy

ISBN: 978-0-387-39977-5
Published: 2006-11-20

This book may be purchased as an eBook (pdf) for $99, or individual chapters (pdf) may be purchased from the list below for $19.




Cancer is a heterogeneous disease in most respects, including its cellularity, different genetic alterations and diverse clinical behaviors. The combinatorial origin, the heterogeneity of malignant cells, and the variable host background produce multiple tumor subclasses. Many analytical methods have been used to study human tumors and to classify them into homogeneous groups that can predict clinical behavior. Currently, cancer classifications are principally based on clinical and histomorphologic features that only partially reflect this heterogeneity, reducing the probability of the most appropriate diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic strategy for each patient. Furthermore, virtually all current anticancer agents do not differentiate between cancerous and normal cells, resulting in sometimes disastrous toxicity and an inconstant efficacy. The development of innovative drugs that selectively target cancer cells while sparing normal tissues is very promising and underscores the importance of dissecting the cascade of molecular events that underlie cancer development, progression and sensitivity to antineoplastic agents. Since these phenomena are sustained by the derangement of multiple genes, biotechnological tools allowing the simultaneous study of hundreds or thousands of molecular targets are greatly welcome and provide investigators with a unique opportunity to decipher the many enigmas that surround cell physiology and disease. Over the last decade– prompted also by the sequencing of the human genome–investigators have devised several gene expression profiling methods, such as comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), differential display, serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE), and DNA arrays. The availability of such large amounts of information has shifted the attention of scientists towards a non-reductionist approach to biological phenomena. High throughput technologies can be used to follow changing patterns of gene expression over time. Among them, DNA arrays have become prominent because they are easier to use, do not require large-scale DNA sequencing, and allow the parallel quantification of thousands of genes from multiple samples. Hopefully, by integrating this powerful analytic tool with other high throughput techniques, such as tissue microarray and proteomics, investigators will be able to comprehensively describe the molecular portrait of the biological phenomena underlying tumor pathogenesis, aggressiveness and response to therapy.

DNA array technology is rapidly spreading worldwide and has the potential to drastically change the therapeutic approach to patients affected with tumor: accordingly, it is of paramount importance for both researchers and clinicians to know the principles underlying this laboratory tool in order to critically appreciate the results originating from this biotechnology.

In the present book, we describe the main features of microarray technology– from DNA array construction to data analysis–and discuss its key applications by reviewing some of the most interesting results already achieved in the field of oncology.


Chapters available from this book


Complementary Techniques: Laser Capture Microdissection—Increasing Specificity of Gene Expression Profiling of Cancer Specimens

Giovanni Esposito

Recent developments in sensitive genome characterization and quantitative gene expression analyses that permit precise molecular genetic fingerprinting of tumoral tissue are having a huge impact on cancer diagnostics. However, the significance of the data obtained with these techniques strictl...

Validation of Gene Expression Data by Quantitative Real Time PCR

Maurizio Provenzano and Simone Mocellin

Microarray technology can be considered the most powerful tool for screening gene expression profiles of biological samples. After data mining, results need to be validated with highly reliable biotechniques allowing for precise quantitation of transcriptional abundance of identified genes. Quan...

SNP and Mutation Analysis

Lu Wang, Robert Luhm and Ming Lei

Genetic variation and SNP analysis starts with generation of sequence-specific signal, followed by the collection of that signal. The final step is extensive data analysis, which starts with conversion of quantifiable raw data and ends up with identified SNPs, frequencies, and sometimes tissue-s...

Technological Platforms for Microarray Gene Expression Profiling

Susanna Mandruzzato

By using gene microarray technology, scientists can determine in a single experiment, the expression levels of thousands of genes within a given sample. DNA microarray technology is evolving rapidly and there are now numerous high-density platforms available which differ in terms of probe conten...

Principles of Gene Microarray Data Analysis

Simone Mocellin and Carlo Riccardo Rossi

The development of several gene expression profiling methods, such as comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), differential display, serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE), and gene microarray, together with the sequencing of the human genome, has provided an opportunity to monitor and invest...

Microarrays for Cancer Diagnosis and Classification

Ainhoa Perez-Diez, Andrey Morgun and Natalia Shulzhenko

Microarray analysis has yet to be widely accepted for diagnosis and classification of human cancers, despite the exponential increase in microarray studies reported in the literature. Among several methods available, a few refined approaches have evolved for the analysis of microarray data for can...

Gene Expression Profiling in Malignant Lymphomas

Sarah E. Henrickson, Elena M. Hartmann, German Ott and Andreas Rosenwald

The practice of clinical medicine and the process of biomedical research have been transformed by the decoding of the human genome. The use of DNA microarrays to find gene expression patterns in disease and biological processes has already begun to have a significant impact on modern medicine. The...

RNA Amplification for Gene Profiling Analysis

Ena Wang, Monica Panelli, and Francesco M Marincola

The study of clinical samples is often limited by the amount of material available. DNA and RNA can be amplified from small specimens and, therefore, used for high-throughput analyses. While precise estimates of the level of DNA concentration in a given specimen is rarely studied (with the excepti...

Gene Profiling for the Prediction of Tumor Response to Treatment: The Case of Immunotherapy

Vladia Monsurrò and Francesco M. Marincola

Although anticancer immune responses can occur, the biological mechanisms responsible for them remain largely unexplained. Immunologists have extensively studied specific interactions between immune and cancer cells and have identified cofactors that may modulate the effectiveness of such intera...

Manufacturing of Microarrays

David W. Petersen* and Ernest S. Kawasaki

DNA microarray technology has become a powerful tool in the arsenal of the molecular biologist. Capitalizing on high precision robotics and the wealth of DNA sequences annotated from the genomes of a large number of organisms, the manufacture of microarrays is now possible for the average academic l...

Identification of Molecular Determinants of Tumor Sensitivity and Resistance to Anticancer Drugs

Luigi Quintieri, Marianna Fantin and Csaba Vizler

Resistance to drugs is a major problem in cancer chemotherapy. Various cellular mechanisms of drug resistance have been identified in cultured tumor cell lines selected for growth in the presence of sublethal concentrations of various anticancer drugs. They involve drug transport and detoxification,...

Tumor Immunology

Simone Mocellin, Mario Lise and Donato Nitti

Advances in tumor immunology are supporting the clinical implementation of several immunological approaches to cancer in the clinical setting. However, the alternate success of current immunotherapeutic regimens underscores the fact that the molecular mechanisms underlying immune-mediated tumor re...


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