4.5 Article

Identification of Common Driver Gene Modules and Associations between Cancers through Integrated Network Analysis

Journal

GLOBAL CHALLENGES
Volume 5, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/gch2.202100006

Keywords

driver gene module; gene mutation; mutual exclusivity; network analysis; signaling pathway

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFA0712400]
  2. Program of Natural Science Fund of China [61902390, 11631014, 11931008, 61771009]
  3. Beijing Municipal Key Laboratory of Clinical Epidemiology

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High-throughput biological data has provided an opportunity to illuminate the mechanisms of tumor emergence and evolution, with the tool ComCovEx being developed to explore common cancer driver gene modules between two cancers and reveal their associations. The research results offer new insights into the pathological basis of different cancer types and provide new clues for the diagnosis and treatment of associated cancers.
Y High-throughput biological data has created an unprecedented opportunity for illuminating the mechanisms of tumor emergence and evolution. An important and challenging problem in deciphering cancers is to investigate the commonalities of driver genes and pathways and the associations between cancers. Aiming at this problem, a tool ComCovEx is developed to identify common cancer driver gene modules between two cancers by searching for the candidates in local signaling networks using an exclusivitycoverage iteration strategy and outputting those with significant coverage and exclusivity for both cancers. The associations of the cancer pairs are further evaluated by Fisher's exact test. Being applied to 11 TCGA cancer datasets, ComCovEx identifies 13 significantly associated cancer pairs with plenty of biologically significant common gene modules. The novel results of cancer relationship and common gene modules reveal the relevant pathological basis of different cancer types and provide new clues to diagnosis and drug treatment in associated cancers.

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