Current News

Country:
Operation:
Search for:
Overview Companies Countries Top News
All   Business   Career   Cooperation   Finances   Laws   Manufacturing   Market
People   Politics   Products   Research   Technology

Contact | Print version | PDF version | Send article | RSS-FeedRSS feed

Oncomine Key to Prostate Cancer Discovery

Cancer Cell Report Identifies SPINK1 as a New Biomarker for Prostate Cancer

12 Jun 2008 - Compendia Bioscience, Inc. announced the central role of their flagship product OncomineTM in the discovery and identification of SPINK1 as a key new therapeutic target and biomarker for prostate cancer. Oncomine is a rapidly growing compendium of nearly 26,000 gene expression and DNA copy number arrays coupled with analysis functions and a web application for data mining and visualization. Comprised of thousands of samples representing every major type of cancer, Oncomine exploits this data for therapeutic target discovery, validation, and prioritization.

 
Compendia CEO Daniel R. Rhodes, Ph.D., in his continued role as a research investigator at the University of Michigan, led the Oncomine analysis that identified SPINK1 as a candidate oncogene in prostate cancer. Further experimental work by many of the same scientists that previously identified ETS-family gene fusions in prostate cancer using Oncomine led to this discovery.
 
"We extended an approach called Cancer Outlier Profile Analysis (COPA) that had previously led us to identify ETS-family gene fusions in prostate cancer," said Dr. Rhodes. "We knew from that experience that true oncogenes are likely to appear in COPA results from multiple independent datasets. Therefore, we intentionally looked for genes that had high COPA ranks across multiple datasets and SPINK1 looked interesting. Further Oncomine analysis showed that SPINK1 over-expression was mutually exclusive with ETS-family gene fusion events and was not present in normal prostate tissue. So, we were pretty sure we had found something important."
 
Published in the current edition of Cancer Cell (Volume 13 Issue 6: June 2008), this study shows that SPINK1 is detectable in the urine and that SPINK1-positive prostate cancers are a particularly aggressive molecular subset of prostate cancer with SPINK1 having a role in cancer invasion.
 
Contact / Request Information
MyBionity.COM
Newsletter Subscription
Your e-mail:
Top  
© 2001-2010 Chemie.DE Information Service GmbH
a Life Science Network Division

 www.Chemie.DE   www.Bionity.COM   www.ChemEurope.COM   www.ChemieKarriere.NET   www.BioKarriere.NET