May 2011
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Epigenetic Pathways—quickly assess multiple genes in parallel to drive your drug development research
Epigenetic pathways provide novel targets for drug development. For oncology in particular, areas of research include resistance to cancer therapies and targeting of solid tumors. These pathways frequently involve multiple genes, and an understanding of their methylation profile individually and in concert with one another is essential. The EpiTYPER® Assay for DNA methylation analysis, provides a rapid method for further target identification. You can improve your epigenetic research with EpiTYPER in several ways:
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Use in parallel or as a replacement to bisulfite sequencing
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Obtain highly quantitative data with as little as 5% changes
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Readily design assays to any gene(s) of interest
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Streamline your workflow with up to 600 bp reads
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Validate methylation profiles for multiple CpGs in one reaction
Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Loci Identified on Chromosome 12 in African Americans
This study takes a deeper look into the association of prostate cancer with Chromosome 12 polymorphic variations and the genetic risk factors related to prostate cancer health disparities. Prostate cancer disproportionally affects individuals of African descent. Prior studies have not provided consistent association of the disease with chromosome 12. This study used ancestry informative markers (AIMs) to distinguish regions of European or West African origin and tested them for association with prostate cancer. AIMs on chromosome 12, and genome-wide AIMs were genotyped in 253 African prostate cancer patients and 297 controls using Illumina. This was followed with finer mapping of 55 SNPs within the associated regions and genotyped together with 15 SNPs in 2 genes involved in vitamin D metabolism using the Sequenom MassARRAY® system. One SNP in HMGA2, 2 SNPs in the vitamin D receptor gene and 3 SNPs in PAWR were found to be associated with prostate cancer risk. PAWR codes for a tumor suppressor that is highly expressed in the prostate. The risk allele of the most significantly associated SNP is rare in West Africans but the major allele in Europeans.
GWAS-identified colorectal cancer susceptibility locus associates with disease prognosis
8 SNPs in known colorectal cancer (CRC) risk genes were analyzed for their association with clinical outcome. 380 Chinese CRC patients were genotyped using iPLEX chemistry. The average call rate was 99.5%, one SNP was excluded due to MAF <2%. One SNP was associated with reduced risk of death. Another SNP in a gene desert was associated with reduced risk of recurrence but only in patients receiving chemotherapy. The effect of chemotherapy on recurrence was only evident in patients with the variant-containing genotyped indicating a borderline significant interaction effect between the genotype and chemotherapy on patient recurrence. This SNP may potentially be used as a biomarker to identify CRC patients with high risk of recurrence after chemotherapy.
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Upcoming Events:
Name: ASCO Annual Meeting
Date: June 4-6, 2011
Details: Come visit us at booth #18139
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