Invasive Ductal Carcinoma Human Breast Matched Pair RNA, Primary and Metastatic (CAT#: DBFF-0624-HY6616)

Datasheet

Overview

Invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) is a common malignant tumor in breast tissue. It is an invasive cancer, meaning that cancer cells are able to break through their original basement membrane, enter surrounding tissues, and even spread to other organs. Invasive Ductal Carcinoma Human Breast Matched Pair RNA, Primary and Metastaticis is isolated from the primary tumor and corresponding metastatic tumor. Total RNA is extracted by the classical guanidine isothiocyanate-phenol chloroform extraction method, which can quickly isolate total RNA including microRNAs. RNA is treated with RNase-free DNase-1 to remove residual DNA.

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Product Summary

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Donor Information

Gender
Female
Age At Sampling
55 yrs
Medical Diagnosis
Invasive ductal carcinoma, metastasize to armpit lymph node

Product Description

Species
Human
Tissue Name
Breast
Sample Diagnosis Category
Primary Tumor and Corresponding Metastatic Tumor
Size
2*10 µg
Concentration
1.58 µg/µl
Shipping
Dry ice
Storage
Stored at -80°C without repeated freeze and thaws
Applications
Northern blotting, ribonuclease protection assay, polymerase chain reaction analysis, rapid amplification of cDNA end analysis, cDNA synthesis, RNA differential display, microRNA studies, and RNA library construction.

Product Properties

Metastatic Site
Armpit Lymph Node
Histopathological Grade
AJCC G3: Poorly differentiated

Technical Specifications

Quality Control
Tested by spectrophotometer and denatured agarose gel electrophoresis
For Research Use Only | Not For Clinical Use

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