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e-Article

Performance in Omics Analyses of Blood Samples in Long-Term Storage: Opportunities for the Exploitation of Existing Biobanks in Environmental Health Research
Document Type
article
Source
Environmental Health Perspectives. 121(4)
Subject
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Human Genome
Genetics
Anticoagulants
Biological Specimen Banks
Biomarkers
Environmental Health
Gene Expression Profiling
Genomics
Humans
Metabolomics
RNA
Specimen Handling
Time Factors
biomarkers
epigenomics
metabolomics
metabonomics
molecular epidemiology
proteomics
transcriptomics
EnviroGenomarkers Project Consortium
Environmental Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Toxicology
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Environmental sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe suitability for omic analysis of biosamples collected in previous decades and currently stored in biobanks is unknown.ObjectivesWe evaluated the influence of handling and storage conditions of blood-derived biosamples on transcriptomic, epigenomic (CpG methylation), plasma metabolomic [UPLC-ToFMS (ultra performance liquid chromatography-time-of-flight mass spectrometry)], and wide-target proteomic profiles.MethodsWe collected fresh blood samples without RNA preservative in heparin, EDTA, or citrate and held them at room temperature for ≤ 24 hr before fractionating them into buffy coat, erythrocytes, and plasma and freezing the fractions at -80oC or in liquid nitrogen. We developed methodology for isolating RNA from the buffy coats and conducted omic analyses. Finally, we analyzed analogous samples from the EPIC-Italy and Northern Sweden Health and Disease Study biobanks.ResultsMicroarray-quality RNA could be isolated from buffy coats (including most biobank samples) that had been frozen within 8 hr of blood collection by thawing the samples in RNA preservative. Different anticoagulants influenced the metabolomic, proteomic, and to a lesser extent transcriptomic profiles. Transcriptomic profiles were most affected by the delay (as little as 2 hr) before blood fractionation, whereas storage temperature had minimal impact. Effects on metabolomic and proteomic profiles were noted in samples processed ≥ 8 hr after collection, but no effects were due to storage temperature. None of the variables examined significantly influenced the epigenomic profiles. No systematic influence of time-in-storage was observed in samples stored over a period of 13-17 years.ConclusionsMost samples currently stored in biobanks are amenable to meaningful omics analysis, provided that they satisfy collection and storage criteria defined in this study.