Project description:Chronological change of gene expression profile of whole blood cells and features of the fraction enriched with tumor-infiltrating inflammatory cells of Balb/c athymic mice with Hepa1-6 tumors
Project description:Five colorectal adenocarcinomas and matched normal colonic tissues were analyzed with Affymetrix HG-U133-Plus-2.0 microarrays. Two labs independently generated microarray data with the same array platform on the same biological samples.
Project description:Chronological change of gene expression profile of whole blood cells and features of the fraction enriched with tumor-infiltrating inflammatory cells of Balb/c athymic mice with Hepa1-6 tumors Two-condition experiment
Project description:Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and lethal primary malignancy of the central nervous system in adult. In order to improve the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of GBM, the details of molecular mechanisms underlying the tumorigenesis and development needs to be clarified. This is a nalysis of glioblastoma tissues and matched adjacent normal brain tissues from 3 patients. Results provide insight into molecular mechanisms underlying the non-coding and coding genes interactions in glioblastoma. 3 human GBM tissues and the matched adjacent normal brain tissues were analyzed using microarray. The aberrant lncRNAs, miRNAs and mRNAs between the 2 groups were detected.
Project description:RNA-Seq was applied to oral squamous cell carcinomas and matched normal oral tissue to measure gene expression patterns and identify examples of allelic imbalance.
Project description:Five colorectal adenocarcinomas and matched normal colonic tissues were analyzed with Affymetrix HG-U133-Plus-2.0 microarrays. Two labs independently generated microarray data with the same array platform on the same biological samples. Colorectal adenocarcinomas and matched normal colonic RNA sample were purchased from Oncomatrix, Inc., San Diego, CA. The RNA from each biological sample was distributed to and processed in two laboratories at Stanford University.