Identification and Validation of Novel Reference Genes in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia for Droplet Digital PCR.
Vanessa Villegas-RuízKarina Olmos-ValdezKattia Alejandra Castro-LópezVictoria Estefanía Saucedo-TepanecatlJosselen Carina Ramírez-ChiquitoEleazar Israel Pérez-LópezIsabel Medina-VeraSergio Juárez-MéndezPublished in: Genes (2019)
Droplet digital PCR is the most robust method for absolute nucleic acid quantification. However, RNA is a very versatile molecule and its abundance is tissue-dependent. RNA quantification is dependent on a reference control to estimate the abundance. Additionally, in cancer, many cellular processes are deregulated which consequently affects the gene expression profiles. In this work, we performed microarray data mining of different childhood cancers and healthy controls. We selected four genes that showed no gene expression variations (PSMB6, PGGT1B, UBQLN2 and UQCR2) and four classical reference genes (ACTB, GAPDH, RPL4 and RPS18). Gene expression was validated in 40 acute lymphoblastic leukemia samples by means of droplet digital PCR. We observed that PSMB6, PGGT1B, UBQLN2 and UQCR2 were expressed ~100 times less than ACTB, GAPDH, RPL4 and RPS18. However, we observed excellent correlations among the new reference genes (p < 0.0001). We propose that PSMB6, PGGT1B, UBQLN2 and UQCR2 are housekeeping genes with low expression in childhood cancer.
Keyphrases
- bioinformatics analysis
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- gene expression
- genome wide
- genome wide identification
- childhood cancer
- nucleic acid
- dna methylation
- single cell
- high throughput
- genome wide analysis
- young adults
- poor prognosis
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- transcription factor
- squamous cell carcinoma
- long non coding rna
- electronic health record
- copy number
- antibiotic resistance genes
- papillary thyroid
- acute myeloid leukemia