Excision repair cross-complementing rodent repair deficiency genes (ERCC) are human genes implicated in nucleotide excision repair. ERCC-2 has been implicated in the repair of DNA damaged by chemotherapeutic agents, and may thus play an important role in anticancer drug resistance. ERCC-2 gene expression is low in primary tumor samples rendering it difficult to quantitate. We have developed a semiquantitative method to measure ERCC-2 gene expression utilizing reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Total RNA extracted from established human tumor cell lines was reverse-transcribed to obtain cDNA. Serially diluted reference ERCC-2 DNA fragment was amplified by PCR to obtain a 617-bp fragment. A standard curve was then created using densitometry readings of the 617-bp bands on agarose gel. A fixed amount of sample cDNA from each cell line was amplified at the same time and the resultant PCR product was read by densitometer. Using the standard curve, ERCC-2 gene expression in a given amount of total RNA was quantitated and normalized to beta-actin expression. There was minimal variation in three repeated experiments with PCR amplification. ERCC-2 gene expression determined by this semiquantitative PCR was also correlated to ERCC-2 quantitation by Northern blot analysis, with a significant concordance (r = 0.912, P = 0.0002). We also successfully applied this sensitive method to quantify five clinical glioma samples.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/abio.1996.9825 | DOI Listing |
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