Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1988648 Journal of Biochemical and Biophysical Methods 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundAberrant DNA methylation of CpG sites is among the earliest and most frequent alterations in cancer. It is of great importance to develop simple, high-throughput and quantitative methods for methylation detection.MethodsA high-throughput methylation analysis method has been developed based on microarray and dual-color fluorescence hybridization. The genomic DNA was treated with bisulfite, resulting in conversion of non-methylated cytosine, but not methylated cytosine, into uracil within CpG islands of interest. PCR products of the treated genomic templates were spotted and immobilized onto a poly-l-lysine coated glass slide to fabricate a microarray and then interrogated by hybridization with dual-color probes to determine the methylation status. The hybridized signals were obtained with a scanner and the results were analyzed with the software Genepix Pro 3.0.ResultsThe methylation status of the CpG islands of IGFBP7 gene has been successfully evaluated by the microarray method for twenty-seven samples. All the investigated samples, including twenty human breast tumor tissues, six corresponding normal human breast tissues and one liver cell line, all CpG sites were found completely methylated.ConclusionsThe microarray technology has been proven to have potential for high-throughput detection of the methylation status for a given gene in multi-genomic samples, which could be a novel approach for rapidly screening DNA methylation marker for early stage cancer diagnosis.

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