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Searching for Pharmacogenomic Markers:
the Synergy Between Omic and Hypothesis-Driven Research
Weinstein JN.
Dis Markers 2001;17(2):77-88
With 35,000 genes and hundreds of thousands of protein states to identify, correlate,
and understand, it no longer suffices to rely on studies of one gene, gene product, or
process at a time. We have entered the "omic" era in biology. But large-scale omic
studies of cellular molecules in aggregate rarely can answer interesting questions
without the assistance of information from traditional hypothesis-driven research.
The two types of science are synergistic. A case in point is the set of pharmacogenomic
studies that we and our collaborators have done with the 60 human cancer cell lines of
the National Cancer Institute's drug discovery program. Those cells (the NCI-60) have
been characterized pharmacologically with respect to their sensitivity to >70,000
chemical compounds. We are further characterizing them at the DNA, RNA, protein, and
functional levels. Our major aim is to identify pharmacogenomic markers that can aid
in drug discovery and design, as well as in individualization of cancer therapy.
The bioinformatic and chemoinformatic challenges of this study have demanded novel
methods for analysis and visualization of high-dimensional data. Included are the
color-coded "clustered image map" and also the MedMiner program package, which captures
and organizes the biomedical literature on gene-gene and gene-drug relationships.
Microarray transcript expression studies of the 60 cell lines reveal, for example,
a gene-drug correlation with potential clinical implications--that between the
asparagine synthetase gene and the enzyme-drug L-asparaginase in ovarian cancer cells.
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