Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2137631 | Leukemia Research | 2011 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
High-throughput genomics requires tumor DNA matched to germline DNA, that cannot be easily obtained in the context of leukemia. Using chronic lymphocytic leukemia as a model, saliva DNA was frequently devoid of tumor DNA also during overt disease, and passed quality controls for SNP-array (77/102, 75.4%) and next generation sequencing (71/102, 69.6%). Compared to saliva, urine provides germline DNA of similar quality but in lower amounts. Saliva DNA was successfully run on SNP 6.0 arrays, and passed quality control call rate thresholds. On these bases, saliva represents a useful source of germline DNA for high-throughput genomic studies of hematologic neoplasia.
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Authors
Silvia Rasi, Alessio Bruscaggin, Andrea Rinaldi, Stefania Cresta, Marco Fangazio, Lorenzo De Paoli, Sara Monti, Ernesto Gargiulo, Ivo Kwee, Robin Foà, Francesco Bertoni, Gianluca Gaidano, Davide Rossi,