ANN ARBOR, Mich. – University of Michigan scientists have created the nanotechnology
equivalent of a Trojan horse to smuggle a powerful chemotherapeutic drug inside
tumor cells – increasing the
A pilot study at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST),
in support of the National Cancer Institute's Early Detection Research Network
(EDRN), has validated the measurement accuracy of new techniques that use mitochondrial
DNA as an early indicator for certain types of cancer. Additional results suggest
that a relatively simple diagnostic test using a DNA microarray "chip" could
enable early detection of some solid tumors, including lung cancer.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) plays a role in respiration
and the cell's energy conversion mechanism. Since
the late 1990s, researchers at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine have observed changes
in mtDNA sequences in solid cancers, although the
nature of the relationship remains uncertain. Their
work suggested that particular changes in mtDNA might
serve as early indicators for several types of solid
cancer. Although promising, this approach is critically
dependent on developing reliable, cost-effective,
and highly sensitive methods of analysis to detect
the cancer indicators against the background of natural
variation in mtDNA.
The NIST Cancer Biomarker Validation and Reference
Laboratory assesses cost, efficiency and reliability
of potential diagnostic techniques using biomarkers
before further clinical evaluation in other laboratories
of the EDRN. The lab found that full mitochondrial
genome sequencing using capillary electrophoresis
detected mtDNA changes associated with early cancer.
In ongoing work, NIST is comparing capillary electrophoresis
methods with a newly developed DNA sequencing chip.
The mtDNA chips are a promising research tool for
early clinical cancer diagnosis that may be faster,
easier to interpret, and provide higher throughput
than other methods. A paper describing the NCI-NIST
work appears in the May issue of the Journal of Molecular
Diagnostics.*
Funded and coordinated by the National Cancer Institute
to speed the development of molecular, genetic and
other biomarkers for early cancer detection, the
Early Detection Research Network is a national network
of research institutions, including developmental
labs, validation labs and clinical centers. NIST
is one of five reference and validation labs in the
EDRN.
*J.P. Jakupciak, W.Wang, M.E. Markowitz, D. Ally,
M. Coble, S. Srivastava, A. Maitra, P.E. Barker,
D. Sidransky, and C.D. O'Connell. Mitochondrial DNA
as a Cancer Biomarker. Journal of Molecular Diagnostics
2005 7: 258-267.
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