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DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1209357
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Transcriptional profiling suggests that Barrett's metaplasia is an early intermediate stage in esophageal adenocarcinogenesis

S. Wang,Ming Zhan,Jing Yin,John M. Abraham,Yuriko Mori,Fumiaki Sato,Yan Xu,Andreea Olaru,Agnes Berki,H. Li,Karsten Schulmann,Takatsugu Kan,James P. Hamilton,Bogdan C. Paun,Miao Yu,Zhe Jin,Yuqiang Cheng,Takahiro Ito,Carmit Mantzur,Bruce D. Greenwald,Stephen J. Meltzer

Biology
Barrett's esophagus
Esophagus
2006
To investigate the relationship between Barrett's esophagus (BE) and esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), we determined gene expression profiles of discrete pathological stages of esophageal neoplasia using a sequence-verified human cDNA microarray. Fifty one RNAs, comprising 24 normal esophagi (NE), 18 BEs, and nine EACs were hybridized to cDNA microarrays. Five statistical analyses were used for the data analysis. Genes showing significantly different expression levels among the three sample groups were identified. Genes were grouped into functional categories based on the Gene Ontology Consortium. Surprisingly, the expression pattern of BE was significantly more similar to EAC than to NE, notwithstanding the known histopathologic differences between BE and EAC. The pattern of NE was clearly distinct from that of EAC. Thirty-six genes were the most differentially modulated, according to these microarray data, in BE-associated neoplastic progression. Twelve genes were significantly differentially expressed in cancer-associated BE's plus EAC (as a single combined tissue group) vs noncancer-associated BE's. These genes represent potential biomarkers to diagnose EAC at its early stages. Our results demonstrate that molecular events at the transcriptional level in BE are remarkably similar to BE's-associated adenocarcinoma of the esophagus. This finding alarmingly implies that BE is biologically closer to cancer than to normal esophagus, and that the cancer risk of BE is perhaps higher than we had imagined. These findings suggest that changes modulated at the molecular biologic level supervene earlier than histologic changes, and that BE is an early intermediate stage in the process of EAC.
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    Transcriptional profiling suggests that Barrett's metaplasia is an early intermediate stage in esophageal adenocarcinogenesis” is a paper by S. Wang Ming Zhan Jing Yin John M. Abraham Yuriko Mori Fumiaki Sato Yan Xu Andreea Olaru Agnes Berki H. Li Karsten Schulmann Takatsugu Kan James P. Hamilton Bogdan C. Paun Miao Yu Zhe Jin Yuqiang Cheng Takahiro Ito Carmit Mantzur Bruce D. Greenwald Stephen J. Meltzer published in 2006. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.