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Saving urinary proteins and nucleic acids on a piece of membrane simply and economically
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Journal of Tissue Science and Engineering

ISSN: 2157-7552

Open Access

Saving urinary proteins and nucleic acids on a piece of membrane simply and economically


Joint Conference:3rd International Conference & Exhibition on TISSUE PRESERVATION AND BIOBANKING & 6th International Conference onTISSUE ENGINEERING AND REGENERATIVE MEDICINE

August 23-24, 2017 San Francisco, USA

Youhe Gao

Beijing Normal University, China

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Tissue Sci Eng

Abstract :

Urine has become more and more recognized as important biomarker source in biomarker discovery. By nature, urine accumulates all kinds of changes and changes are the most basic property of biomarker. In this sense, theoretically urine can be even better biomarker source than blood. There may be a urine biomarker era ahead of us. Even though metabolites were analyzed extensively as potential biomarker in urine, proteins and microRNAs may possess more specificity of the diseases. Saving proteins and nucleic acids were challenging because they not only took huge space but also gradually degraded even frozen in -80�º. Here we present a simple and economical method that make storing large number of urinary proteins and nucleic acids clinical samples possible. Urine samples were filtered through the membrane, and urinary proteins were adsorbed onto the membrane. The membrane used can have high affinity to proteins or nucleic acids. Then the membrane was dried and stored in a vacuum bag, which kept the protein and microRNA faithfully preserved. The membrane may even permit storage at room temperature for weeks. This simple and inexpensive method requires minimal sample handling, uses no organic solvents, and is environmental friendly. With this method, large number of samples will be available to biomarker discovery and validation. Biomarker research can be significantly more efficient. There has not been any new form of tissue preservation for years. This membrane, which we call urine, may be kept with medical record of all consenting people in the future.

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 807

Journal of Tissue Science and Engineering received 807 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Tissue Science and Engineering peer review process verified at publons

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