posted on 2016-04-22, 15:30authored byPamela A. Davoren, Roisin E. McNeill, Aoife J. Lowery, Michael J. Kerin, Nicola Miller
The discovery of microRNAs (miRNAs) added an extra level of intricacy to the already complex
system regulating gene expression. These single-stranded RNA molecules, 18–25 nucleotides in
length, negatively regulate gene expression through translational inhibition or mRNA cleavage. The
discovery that aberrant expression of specific miRNAs contributes to human disease has fueled
much interest in profiling the expression of these molecules. Real-time quantitative PCR (RQ-PCR)
is a sensitive and reproducible gene expression quantitation technique which is now being used to
profile miRNA expression in cells and tissues. To correct for systematic variables such as amount
of starting template, RNA quality and enzymatic efficiencies, RQ-PCR data is commonly normalised
to an endogenous control (EC) gene, which ideally, is stably-expressed across the test sample set.
A universal endogenous control suitable for every tissue type, treatment and disease stage has not
been identified and is unlikely to exist, so, to avoid introducing further error in the quantification
of expression data it is necessary that candidate ECs be validated in the samples of interest. While
ECs have been validated for quantification of mRNA expression in various experimental settings,
to date there is no report of the validation of miRNA ECs for expression profiling in breast tissue.
In this study, the expression of five miRNA genes (let-7a, miR-10b, miR-16, miR-21 and miR-26b) and
three small nucleolar RNA genes (RNU19, RNU48 and Z30) was examined across malignant, benign
and normal breast tissues to determine the most appropriate normalisation strategy. This is the
first study to identify reliable ECs for analysis of miRNA by RQ-PCR in human breast tissue.