Identifying biomarkers for evaluating wound extent and age in the contused muscle of rats using microarray analysis: a pilot study

Author:

Li Na1,Li Chun1,Li Dan1,Dang Li-hong1,Ren Kang1,Du Qiu-xiang1,Cao Jie1,Jin Qian-qian1,Wang Ying-yuan1,Bai Ru-feng2,Sun Jun-hong1

Affiliation:

1. School of Forensic Medicine, Shanxi Medical University, Jinzhong, China

2. Key Laboratory of Evidence Science, China University of Political Science and Law, Beijing, China

Abstract

Wound age estimation is still one of the most important and significant challenges in forensic practice. The extent of wound damage greatly affects the accuracy and reliability of wound age estimation, so it is important to find effective biomarkers to help diagnose wound degree and wound age. In the present study, the gene expression profiles of both mild and severe injuries in 33 rats were assayed at 0, 1, 3, 24, 48, and 168 hours using the Affymetrix microarray system to provide biomarkers for the evaluation of wound age and the extent of the wound. After obtaining thousands of differentially expressed genes, a principal component analysis, the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator, and a time-series analysis were used to select the most predictive prognostic genes. Finally, 15 genes were screened for evaluating the extent of wound damage, and the top 60 genes were also screened for wound age estimation in mild and severe injury. Selected indicators showed good diagnostic performance for identifying the extent of the wound and wound age in a Fisher discriminant analysis. A function analysis showed that the candidate genes were mainly related to cell proliferation and the inflammatory response, primarily IL-17 and the Hematopoietic cell lineage signalling pathway. The results revealed that these genes play an essential role in wound-healing and yield helpful and valuable potential biomarkers for further targeted studies.

Funder

The National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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