Abstract

BackgroundMicroRNAs are small RNA molecules that negatively regulate gene expression by translational inhibition or mRNA cleavage. The discovery that abnormal expression of particular miRNAs contributes to human disease, including cancer, has spurred growing interest in analysing expression profiles of these molecules. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction is frequently used for quantification of miRNA expression due to its sensitivity and specificity. To minimize experimental error in this system an appropriate endogenous control gene must be chosen. An ideal endogenous control gene should be expressed at a constant level across all samples and its expression stability should be unaffected by the experimental procedure.ResultsThe expression and validation of candidate control genes (4.5S RNA(H) A, Y1, 4.5S RNA(H) B, snoRNA, U87 and U6) was examined in 21 rat cell lines to establish the most suitable endogenous control for miRNA analysis in a rat model of cancer. The stability of these genes was analysed using geNorm and NormFinder algorithms. U87 and snoRNA were identified as the most stable control genes, while Y1 was least stable.ConclusionThis study identified the control gene that is most suitable for normalizing the miRNA expression data in rat. That reference gene will be useful when miRNAs expression are analyzed in order to find new miRNA markers for endometrial cancer in rat.

Highlights

  • MicroRNAs are small RNA molecules that negatively regulate gene expression by translational inhibition or mRNA cleavage

  • According to the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) around 288 000 women worldwide develop endometrial cancer annually and 74 000 died from this cancer in 2008 [1]. This malignancy can be divided into two different types, endometrioid adenocarcinoma and serous carcinoma

  • Differences between the triplicates were tested for significance by analysis of variance (ANOVA) (p < 0.05), which revealed no significant differences between the three replicates in any of the six endogenous controls

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Summary

Introduction

MicroRNAs are small RNA molecules that negatively regulate gene expression by translational inhibition or mRNA cleavage. An ideal endogenous control gene should be expressed at a constant level across all samples and its expression stability should be unaffected by the experimental procedure. According to the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) around 288 000 women worldwide develop endometrial cancer annually and 74 000 died from this cancer in 2008 [1]. This malignancy can be divided into two different types, endometrioid adenocarcinoma (type I) and serous carcinoma (type II). The similarities in physiology and pathogenesis between rats and humans imply that the BDII rat strain is a suitable model for analysis of human endometrial cancer [7]

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