BMC Medical Genomics (Jun 2009)

Identification and analysis of miRNAs in human breast cancer and teratoma samples using deep sequencing

  • Nygaard Sanne,
  • Jacobsen Anders,
  • Lindow Morten,
  • Eriksen Jens,
  • Balslev Eva,
  • Flyger Henrik,
  • Tolstrup Niels,
  • Møller Søren,
  • Krogh Anders,
  • Litman Thomas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1755-8794-2-35
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 35

Abstract

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Abstract Background MiRNAs play important roles in cellular control and in various disease states such as cancers, where they may serve as markers or possibly even therapeutics. Identifying the whole repertoire of miRNAs and understanding their expression patterns is therefore an important goal. Methods Here we describe the analysis of 454 pyrosequencing of small RNA from four different tissues: Breast cancer, normal adjacent breast, and two teratoma cell lines. We developed a pipeline for identifying new miRNAs, emphasizing extracting and retaining as much data as possible from even noisy sequencing data. We investigated differential expression of miRNAs in the breast cancer and normal adjacent breast samples, and systematically examined the mature sequence end variability of miRNA compared to non-miRNA loci. Results We identified five novel miRNAs, as well as two putative alternative precursors for known miRNAs. Several miRNAs were differentially expressed between the breast cancer and normal breast samples. The end variability was shown to be significantly different between miRNA and non-miRNA loci. Conclusion Pyrosequencing of small RNAs, together with a computational pipeline, can be used to identify miRNAs in tumor and other tissues. Measures of miRNA end variability may in the future be incorporated into the discovery pipeline as a discriminatory feature. Breast cancer samples show a distinct miRNA expression profile compared to normal adjacent breast.