Gene Expression Profiling of Colorectal Tumors and Normal Mucosa by Microarrays Meta-Analysis Using Prediction Analysis of Microarray, Artificial Neural Network, Classification, and Regression Trees

Chi‐Ming Chu(National Defense Medical Center), Chung‐Tay Yao(Cathay General Hospital), Yu-Tien Chang(National Defense Medical Center), Hsiu‐Ling Chou(Asia Eastern University of Science and Technology), Yu‐Ching Chou(National Defense Medical Center), Kang‐Hua Chen(Chang Gung University), Harn-Jing Terng, Chi-Shuan Huang(Cheng Hsin General Hospital), Chia‐Cheng Lee(Tri-Service General Hospital), Sui‐Lung Su(National Defense Medical Center), Yao‐Chi Liu(Tri-Service General Hospital), Fu‐Gong Lin(National Defense Medical Center), Thomas C. Wetter(Heidelberg University), Chi‐Wen Chang(Chang Gung University)
Disease Markers
January 1, 2014
Cited by 58Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Microarray technology shows great potential but previous studies were limited by small number of samples in the colorectal cancer (CRC) research. The aims of this study are to investigate gene expression profile of CRCs by pooling cDNA microarrays using PAM, ANN, and decision trees (CART and C5.0). METHODS: Pooled 16 datasets contained 88 normal mucosal tissues and 1186 CRCs. PAM was performed to identify significant expressed genes in CRCs and models of PAM, ANN, CART, and C5.0 were constructed for screening candidate genes via ranking gene order of significances. RESULTS: The first screening identified 55 genes. The test accuracy of each model was over 0.97 averagely. Less than eight genes achieve excellent classification accuracy. Combining the results of four models, we found the top eight differential genes in CRCs; suppressor genes, CA7, SPIB, GUCA2B, AQP8, IL6R and CWH43; oncogenes, SPP1 and TCN1. Genes of higher significances showed lower variation in rank ordering by different methods. CONCLUSION: We adopted a two-tier genetic screen, which not only reduced the number of candidate genes but also yielded good accuracy (nearly 100%). This method can be applied to future studies. Among the top eight genes, CA7, TCN1, and CWH43 have not been reported to be related to CRC.


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