Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2811227 Acta Genetica Sinica 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Oligonucleotide microarrays were used to study the differences of gene expressions in high (H) and low (L) metastatic ovarian cancer cell lines and in normal ovarian tissues (C). Bioinformatics was used to identify novel genes and their functions as well as chromosomal localizations. A total of 409 genes were differentially expressed between the high and low metastatic ovarian cancer cell lines. Of them, 271 genes were up regulated (Signal Log Ratio[SLR] ≥1), and 138 genes were down regulated (SLR≤-1). Except one gene whose location was unknown, all these genes were localized randomly on all the chromosomes, with a majority of them localized to Chromosomes 1, 6, 2, 17, 3, 5 and 11. Chromosome 1 contained, 43 of them (10.7%), the most for a single chromosome. A total of 264 genes (64.7%) were localized on the short arm of the chromosome (q). Functional classification showed that the 104 (25.4%) genes coding for enzymes and enzyme regulators made up the largest functional group, followed by signal transduction activity genes (43, 10.5%), nucleic acid binding activity genes (42, 10.3%), and proteins binding activity genes (34, 8.3%). These four groups accounted for 54.5% of all the differentially expressed genes. In addition, the functions of 76 genes (18.6%) were unknown. Tumor metastasis is the result of a number of genes acting in concert. The four functional groups of genes classified among these genes and their abnormalities would be the focus of further studies on ovarian cancer metastasis.

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