Abstract

It is widely known that cells from epithelial tumors, e.g., breast cancer, detach from their primary tissue and enter blood circulation. We show that the presence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in samples of patients with primary and metastatic breast cancer can be detected with an array of selected tumor-marker-genes by reverse transcription real-time PCR. The focus of the presented work is on detecting differences in gene expression between healthy individuals and adjuvant and metastatic breast cancer patients, not an accurate quantification of these differences. Therefore, total RNA was isolated from blood samples of healthy donors and patients with primary or metastatic breast cancer after enrichment of mononuclear cells by density gradient centrifugation. After reverse transcription real-time PCR was carried out with a set of marker genes (BCSP, CK8, Her2, MGL, CK18, CK19). B2M and GAPDH were used as reference genes. Blood samples from patients with metastatic disease revealed increased cytokine gene levels in comparison to normal blood samples. Detection of a single gene was not sufficient to detect CTCs by reverse transcription real-time PCR. Markers used here were selected based on a recent study detecting cancer cells on different protein levels. The combination of such a marker array leads to higher and more specific discovery rates, predominantly in metastatic patients. Identification of CTCs by PCR methods may lead to better diagnosis and prognosis and could help to choose an adequate therapy.

Highlights

  • One major characteristic of malignant tissue is their differently regulated gene expression levels in comparison to normal tissue [1]

  • We present a TaqMan® PCR assay using six marker genes which are known to be upregulated in breast cancer cells

  • We are presenting a reverse transcription real-time PCR assay for the detection of Circulating Tumor Cells from peripheral blood, rendering the advantage for the patient, that no biopsies or bone marrow aspirations have to be withdrawn for the analysis

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Summary

Introduction

One major characteristic of malignant tissue is their differently regulated gene expression levels in comparison to normal tissue [1] Such genes with altered expression have been found in breast cancer with the help of microarray analysis screenings [2,3]. Metastatic events occur when cells dissolve from the primary tumor, circulate via the blood stream or the lymphatic system to other organs, evade into the new environment and become secondary tumors [4,5,6].

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