Journal of Pathology Informatics (Jan 2011)

SIVQ-aided laser capture microdissection: A tool for high-throughput expression profiling

  • Jason Hipp,
  • Jerome Cheng,
  • Jeffrey C Hanson,
  • Wusheng Yan,
  • Phil Taylor,
  • Nan Hu,
  • Jaime Rodriguez-Canales,
  • Jennifer Hipp,
  • Michael A Tangrea,
  • Michael R Emmert-Buck,
  • Ulysses Balis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/2153-3539.78500
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 19 – 19

Abstract

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Introduction: Laser capture microdissection (LCM) facilitates procurement of defined cell populations for study in the context of histopathology. The morphologic assessment step in the LCM procedure is time consuming and tedious, thus restricting the utility of the technology for large applications. Results: Here, we describe the use of Spatially Invariant Vector Quantization (SIVQ) for histological analysis and LCM. Using SIVQ, we selected vectors as morphologic predicates that were representative of normal epithelial or cancer cells and then searched for phenotypically similar cells across entire tissue sections. The selected cells were subsequently auto-microdissected and the recovered RNA was analyzed by expression microarray. Gene expression profiles from SIVQ-LCM and standard LCM-derived samples demonstrated highly congruous signatures, confirming the equivalence of the differing microdissection methods. Conclusion: SIVQ-LCM improves the work-flow of microdissection in two significant ways. First, the process is transformative in that it shifts the pathologist′s role from technical execution of the entire microdissection to a limited-contact supervisory role, enabling large-scale extraction of tissue by expediting subsequent semi-autonomous identification of target cell populations. Second, this work-flow model provides an opportunity to systematically identify highly constrained cell populations and morphologically consistent regions within tissue sections. Integrating SIVQ with LCM in a single environment provides advanced capabilities for efficient and high-throughput histological-based molecular studies.

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