Buesa Carlos, Maes Tamara, Subirada Francesca, Barrachina Marta, Ferrer Isidro
Cell Signaling Group (CB), Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of Pharmacy, University of Barcelona, Barcelona.
J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. 2004 Oct;63(10):1003-14. doi: 10.1093/jnen/63.10.1003.
DNA microarray technology is based on the principle of hybridization between 2 complementary strands of nucleic acids, one being fixed into a solid membrane, the other being the sample to analyze. This has resulted in a very powerful method to examine differential gene expression between samples, and has been widely used in the study of tumors. The application of DNA microarray technology to the study of the nervous system has to consider several properties of the nervous tissue: composition of various neuronal types, as well as astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and microglia; regional and area differences; developmental and age-dependent variations; and functional and pathological status. Moreover, human samples are usually obtained postmortem following variable agonal periods and postmortem delays between death and tissue preservation, which are accompanied by variable RNA degradation. Yet human postmortem nervous tissue stored in brain banks offers a unique opportunity to facilitate material for the study of diseases of the nervous system and to gain direct understanding on the mechanisms of disease. This review analyzes the application of DNA microarray technology to current practice using brain-banked tissues in order to recognize and minimize sub-optimal processing of brain samples and to correct pitfalls due to inadequate procedures. Also discussed are RNA preservation and RNA degradation effects on expression pattern assessments, analysis of individual versus pooled samples, array normalization, types of DNA chip platforms, whole genomic analysis versus specialized chips, and microgenomics. Minimizing RNA degradation and improving detection of resistant RNA in postmortem brain has been considered in detail in order to improve the efficiency and reliability of DNA microarray technology employed in the study of human postmortem nervous tissue.
DNA微阵列技术基于两条互补核酸链之间的杂交原理,一条固定在固体膜上,另一条是待分析的样本。这产生了一种非常强大的方法来检测样本之间的差异基因表达,并已广泛应用于肿瘤研究。将DNA微阵列技术应用于神经系统研究时,必须考虑神经组织的几个特性:各种神经元类型以及星形胶质细胞、少突胶质细胞和小胶质细胞的组成;区域和面积差异;发育和年龄依赖性变化;以及功能和病理状态。此外,人类样本通常是在死亡后经过不同的濒死期以及死亡与组织保存之间的死后延迟后获得的,这些都会伴随着不同程度的RNA降解。然而,储存在脑库中的人类死后神经组织提供了一个独特的机会,有助于获取用于神经系统疾病研究的材料,并直接了解疾病机制。本综述分析了DNA微阵列技术在当前使用脑库组织的实践中的应用,以识别并尽量减少脑样本处理欠佳的情况,并纠正因程序不当而产生的问题。还讨论了RNA保存和RNA降解对表达模式评估的影响、个体样本与混合样本的分析、阵列标准化、DNA芯片平台类型、全基因组分析与专用芯片以及微基因组学。为了提高用于人类死后神经组织研究的DNA微阵列技术的效率和可靠性,已详细考虑了尽量减少RNA降解以及改善死后脑中抗性RNA的检测。