AI Article Synopsis

  • Biobanks of frozen human tissues are crucial for cancer research but depend heavily on proper sample handling and quality control.
  • This study tested the effectiveness of vacuum storage (UVS) in preserving tissue samples taken from cancer patients between surgery and storage for "omics" analyses.
  • Results indicate that UVS maintains the integrity of tissue morphology, RNA, and protein for up to 48 hours, although metabolite levels change significantly within the first hour.

Article Abstract

Context: Biobanks of frozen human normal and malignant tissues represent a valuable source for "omics" analysis in translational cancer research and molecular pathology. However, the success of molecular and cellular analysis strongly relies on the collection, handling, storage procedures, and quality control of fresh human tissue samples.

Objective: We tested whether under vacuum storage (UVS) effectively preserves tissues during the time between surgery and storage for "omics" analyses.

Design: Normal and matched tumor specimens, obtained from 16 breast, colon, or lung cancer patients and 5 independent mesenchymal tumors, were dissected within 20 minutes from surgical excision and divided in three to five aliquots; for each tissue sample, one aliquot was snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen (defined as baseline or T0 samples), and the other portions were sealed into plastic bags and kept at 4°C for 1, 24, 48, or 72 hours under vacuum and then frozen. The tissue and molecular preservation under vacuum was evaluated over time in terms of histomorphology, transcription (Illumina microarrays), protein (surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization-time of flight/mass spectrometry and Western blot), and metabolic profile (nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy).

Results: Tissue morphology, Mib-1, and vimentin immunostaining were preserved over time without signs of tissue degradation. Principal variance component analysis showed that time of storage had a minimal effect on gene expression or the proteome, but affected the preservation of some metabolites to a greater extent. UVS did not impact the RNA and protein integrity or specific phosphorylation sites on mTOR and STAT3. Measurement of metabolites revealed pronounced changes after 1 hour of storage.

Conclusions: Our results show that UVS can preserve tissue specimens for histological, transcriptomic, and proteomic examinations up to 48 hours and possibly longer, whereas it has limitations for metabolomic applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/bio.2015.0093DOI Listing

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