Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2832206 | Molecular Immunology | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Our approach identified 50% and 75% of the 12 and 4 known TSAs and predicted from the human cancer genomes additional 8-250 and 14-359 putative TSAs of 5 and 3 HLA alleles respectively. The known TSA hit rates (1.9% and 0.8%) are enriched by 29-fold and 35-fold over those of mutation analysis. The numbers of predicted TSAs are within the testing range of typical screening campaigns. Noises in expression data of small sample sizes appear to be a major factor for misidentification of known TSAs. With improved data quality and analysis methods, the collective approach is potentially useful for facilitating genome-scale TSA search.
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Authors
Jia Jia, Juan Cui, Xianghui Liu, Jinhua Han, Shengyong Yang, Yuquan Wei, Yuzong Chen,