Abstract

Purpose: We compared the expression of microRNAs (miRNAs) in rat chondrosarcoma relative to normal rat cartilage with miRNA expression in human chondrosarcoma relative to normal human cartilage. We did this in order to answer the question: Are the miRNA profiles of chondrosarcoma in humans and rats similar enough to allow for the rat model to be valid for study of chondrosarcoma in humans? Methods: Twenty rats were sacrificed, cartilage was collected, RNA extracted and 233 miRNAs analyzed. The expression of these miRNAs was then compared to their expression in normal human tissue and chondrosarcoma. Integrative correlation coefficients were applied to the data in whole to measure the similarity between the rat and human miRNA. Results: For normal human versus normal rat cartilage the integrative correlation coefficient was 0.84 (95% CI: 0.82–0.87). The integrative correlation coefficient for chondrosarcoma in human versus rat tissue was 0.70 (95% CI: 0.65–0.74). Conclusions: Our findings suggest that human and rat normal cartilage, as well as chondrosarcoma genetics, are sufficiently similar for use of rat models to study chondrosarcoma (integrative correlation coefficient [Formula: see text]). We also revealed similarities between specific miRNA, especially those with the most similar fold-change (miR26b, 126, 145, 195, and 320).

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