Analysis of KRAS, NRAS and BRAF mutational profile by combinantion of in-tube hybridization and universal tag-microarray in tumor tissue and plasma of colorectal cancer patients
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Microarray technology fails in detecting point mutations present in a small fraction of cells
from heterogeneous tissue samples or in plasma in a background of wild-type cell-free circulating
tumor DNA (ctDNA). The aim of this study is to overcome the lack of sensitivity and
specificity of current microarray approaches introducing a rapid and sensitive microarraybased
assay for the multiplex detection of minority mutations of oncogenes (KRAS, NRAS
and BRAF) with relevant diagnostics implications in tissue biopsies and plasma samples in
metastatic colorectal cancer patients. In our approach, either wild-type or mutated PCR fragments
are hybridized in solution, in a temperature gradient, with a set of reporters with a 5'
domain, complementary to the target sequences and a 3' domain complementary to a surface
immobilized probe. Upon specific hybridization in solution, which occurs specifically
thanks to the temperature gradients, wild-type and mutated samples are captured at specific
location on the surface by hybridization of the 3' reporter domain with its complementary
immobilized probe sequence. The most common mutations in KRAS, NRAS and BRAF
genes were detected in less than 90 minutes in tissue biopsies and plasma samples of metastatic
colorectal cancer patients. Moreover, the method was able to reveal mutant alleles
representing less than 0,3% of total DNA. We demonstrated detection limits superior to
those provided by many current technologies in the detection of RAS and BRAF gene superfamily
mutations, a level of sensitivity compatible with the analysis of cell free circulating
tumor DNA in liquid biopsy.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
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List of contributors: