Potentials of single-cell biology in identification and validation of disease biomarkers

J Cell Mol Med. 2016 Sep;20(9):1789-95. doi: 10.1111/jcmm.12868. Epub 2016 Apr 26.

Abstract

Single-cell biology is considered a new approach to identify and validate disease-specific biomarkers. However, the concern raised by clinicians is how to apply single-cell measurements for clinical practice, translate the message of single-cell systems biology into clinical phenotype or explain alterations of single-cell gene sequencing and function in patient response to therapies. This study is to address the importance and necessity of single-cell gene sequencing in the identification and development of disease-specific biomarkers, the definition and significance of single-cell biology and single-cell systems biology in the understanding of single-cell full picture, the development and establishment of whole-cell models in the validation of targeted biological function and the figure and meaning of single-molecule imaging in single cell to trace intra-single-cell molecule expression, signal, interaction and location. We headline the important role of single-cell biology in the discovery and development of disease-specific biomarkers with a special emphasis on understanding single-cell biological functions, e.g. mechanical phenotypes, single-cell biology, heterogeneity and organization of genome function. We have reason to believe that such multi-dimensional, multi-layer, multi-crossing and stereoscopic single-cell biology definitely benefits the discovery and development of disease-specific biomarkers.

Keywords: gene sequencing; genome function; heterogeneity; mechanical phenotypes; single-cell biology.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biomarkers / metabolism*
  • Disease
  • Humans
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Sequence Analysis
  • Single-Cell Analysis
  • Systems Biology

Substances

  • Biomarkers