Scientists Discover New Molecular Markers for Testicular Cancer Researchers in the Netherlands use new technology from Applied Biosystems to identify different expression patterns of microRNA molecules in normal and cancerous cells
18 Oct 2007 -
Scientists at the Erasmus MC-University Medical Center in Rotterdam, The Netherlands and Applied Biosystems, an Applera Corporation business, have made significant advances in testicular cancer research by identifying and analyzing a set of specific microRNA molecular markers that are involved in the development of testicular tumors. The study, which will be published in The Journal of Pathology (Vol. 213 issue 3), provides new information about the unique cellular events that cause testicular cancer. These findings could potentially lead to earlier identification of the disease and new approaches for treating the cancer.
Although testicular cancer is relatively rare in the general population, it is the most common cancer in men between the ages of 15 and 44 years old. This study has found that normal and cancerous cells contain distinctly different amounts of molecules called microRNAs. The findings also showed that a tumor' s microRNA expression pattern provides vital information about the malignancy of the tumor. This new information could help clinicians to identify testicular cancer patients more quickly and more accurately, and provide more precise prognoses than current approaches.
MicroRNAs are short non-coding RNA molecules that regulate gene expression. They play an important role in many biological processes, particularly in cell differentiation and development. MicroRNAs have also been implicated in a number of different diseases, including various cancers. Research related to microRNAs is one of the fastest growing areas in biology.
The researchers in this study, who included Prof Leendert Looijenga, group leader within the department of pathology at the Erasmus Medical Center, which is affiliated with the Josephine Nefkens Institute in Rotterdam, and Simone Günther, Ph.D. and Jon Sherlock, Ph.D. from Applied Biosystems, profiled the expression patterns of 157 microRNA molecules in a series of different testicular tumors and normal testicular tissue samples.