Project description:Abstract: Background: MiRNA signatures in human sera have been reported for various tumor diseases. Here we generated miRNA profiles analyzing 1205 mature miRNA transcripts of serum samples of Wilms tumor patients, taken prior and after chemotherapy according to SIOP protocol 2001. Using a feature subset selection filter approach we identified a minimal number of miRNAs with a maximum contribution for the classification between treated and untreated patients and between patients and controls. Results: Analyzing 1205 mature miRNAs, we separated controls and Wilms tumor patients prior chemotherapy with an accuracy of 0.81. We obtained a similar accuracy (0.82) for the separation between controls and sera of Wilms tumor patients after preoperative chemotherapy. We identified 23 miRNAs that were differentially expressed in both comparisons. Subset selection improved the overall classification accuracy between controls and Wilms tumor patients prior and after chemotherapy to 0.94 and 0.91, respectively. Subset selection also allowed separating between Wilms tumor patients prior and after chemotherapy with an accuracy of 0.98. Conclusion: Our analysis identified serum based miRNA signatures that allowed separating between controls, untreated Wilms tumor patients, and Wilms tumor patients after chemotherapy with high accuracy for each of these comparisons.
Project description:Blood-borne miRNA signatures have recently been reported for various tumor diseases. Here, we compared the miRNA signature in Wilms tumor patients prior to and after preoperative chemotherapy according to the SIOP protocol 2001. We did not find a significant difference between the miRNA signatures of both groups. However, both Wilms tumor patients prior to and after chemotherapy showed a miRNA signature different from that of healthy controls. The signature of Wilms tumor patients prior to chemotherapy showed an accuracy of 97.5% and of patients after chemotherapy an accuracy of 97.0%, each as compared to healthy controls. Our results provide evidence for a blood-borne Wilms tumor miRNA signature largely independent of four weeks preoperative chemotherapy treatment.
Project description:We have sequenced miRNA libraries from human embryonic, neural and foetal mesenchymal stem cells. We report that the majority of miRNA genes encode mature isomers that vary in size by one or more bases at the 3’ and/or 5’ end of the miRNA. Northern blotting for individual miRNAs showed that the proportions of isomiRs expressed by a single miRNA gene often differ between cell and tissue types. IsomiRs were readily co-immunoprecipitated with Argonaute proteins in vivo and were active in luciferase assays, indicating that they are functional. Bioinformatics analysis predicts substantial differences in targeting between miRNAs with minor 5’ differences and in support of this we report that a 5’ isomiR-9-1 gained the ability to inhibit the expression of DNMT3B and NCAM2 but lost the ability to inhibit CDH1 in vitro. This result was confirmed by the use of isomiR-specific sponges. Our analysis of the miRGator database indicates that a small percentage of human miRNA genes express isomiRs as the dominant transcript in certain cell types and analysis of miRBase shows that 5’ isomiRs have replaced canonical miRNAs many times during evolution. This strongly indicates that isomiRs are of functional importance and have contributed to the evolution of miRNA genes
Project description:Blood-borne miRNA signatures have recently been reported for various tumor diseases. Here, we compared the miRNA signature in Wilms tumor patients prior to and after preoperative chemotherapy according to the SIOP protocol 2001. We did not find a significant difference between the miRNA signatures of both groups. However, both Wilms tumor patients prior to and after chemotherapy showed a miRNA signature different from that of healthy controls. The signature of Wilms tumor patients prior to chemotherapy showed an accuracy of 97.5% and of patients after chemotherapy an accuracy of 97.0%, each as compared to healthy controls. Our results provide evidence for a blood-borne Wilms tumor miRNA signature largely independent of four weeks preoperative chemotherapy treatment. This project analyzes peripheral blood profiles of Wilms tumor patients and controls in order to detect specific profiles. n=19 normal controls and n=23 Wilms tumor patients were screened for the complete miRNA repertoire. Please note that each miRNA has been measured in seven replicates and the median of the replica has been computed.
Project description:Transcriptional profiling of Homo sapiens inflammatory skin diseases (whole skin biospies): Psoriasis (Pso), vs Atopic Dermatitis (AD) vs Lichen planus (Li), vs Contact Eczema (KE), vs Healthy control (KO) In recent years, different genes and proteins have been highlighted as potential biomarkers for psoriasis, one of the most common inflammatory skin diseases worldwide. However, most of these markers are not psoriasis-specific but also found in other inflammatory disorders. We performed an unsupervised cluster analysis of gene expression profiles in 150 psoriasis patients and other inflammatory skin diseases (atopic dermatitis, lichen planus, contact eczema, and healthy controls). We identified a cluster of IL-17/TNFα-associated genes specifically expressed in psoriasis, among which IL-36γ was the most outstanding marker. In subsequent immunohistological analyses IL-36γ was confirmed to be expressed in psoriasis lesions only. IL-36γ peripheral blood serum levels were found to be closely associated with disease activity, and they decreased after anti-TNFα-treatment. Furthermore, IL-36γ immunohistochemistry was found to be a helpful marker in the histological differential diagnosis between psoriasis and eczema in diagnostically challenging cases. These features highlight IL-36γ as a valuable biomarker in psoriasis patients, both for diagnostic purposes and measurement of disease activity during the clinical course. Furthermore, IL-36γ might also provide a future drug target, due to its potential amplifier role in TNFα- and IL-17 pathways in psoriatic skin inflammation. In recent years, different genes and proteins have been highlighted as potential biomarkers for psoriasis, one of the most common inflammatory skin diseases worldwide. However, most of these markers are not psoriasis-specific but also found in other inflammatory disorders. We performed an unsupervised cluster analysis of gene expression profiles in 150 psoriasis patients and other inflammatory skin diseases (atopic dermatitis, lichen planus, contact eczema, and healthy controls). We identified a cluster of IL-17/TNFα-associated genes specifically expressed in psoriasis, among which IL-36γ was the most outstanding marker. In subsequent immunohistological analyses IL-36γ was confirmed to be expressed in psoriasis lesions only. IL-36γ peripheral blood serum levels were found to be closely associated with disease activity, and they decreased after anti-TNFα-treatment. Furthermore, IL-36γ immunohistochemistry was found to be a helpful marker in the histological differential diagnosis between psoriasis and eczema in diagnostically challenging cases. These features highlight IL-36γ as a valuable biomarker in psoriasis patients, both for diagnostic purposes and measurement of disease activity during the clinical course. Furthermore, IL-36γ might also provide a future drug target, due to its potential amplifier role in TNFα- and IL-17 pathways in psoriatic skin inflammation.