4.7 Article

Pan-cancer onco-signatures reveal a novel mitochondrial subtype of luminal breast cancer with specific regulators

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12967-023-03907-z

Keywords

Onco-signatures; Pan-cancer; Breast cancer disease; TCGA; Gene set enrichment analysis; Normalized enrichment score; Luminal breast tumor subtype; EMT; Hsa-miR-135-5p; TDMD

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We developed a novel data-driven approach to identify shared oncogenic expression signatures among tumors and used it to classify patients and predict prognosis. We also discovered a mitochondrial sub-group of Luminal breast cancer patients with specific biological features and genetic regulation. These findings provide genomics evidence for personalized breast cancer patient treatments.
BackgroundSomatic alterations in cancer cause dysregulation of signaling pathways that control cell-cycle progression, apoptosis, and cell growth. The effect of individual alterations in these pathways differs between individual tumors and tumor types. Recognizing driver events is a complex task requiring integrating multiple molecular data, including genomics, epigenomics, and functional genomics. A common hypothesis is that these driver events share similar effects on the hallmarks of cancer. The availability of large-scale multi-omics studies allows for inferring these common effects from data. Once these effects are known, one can then deconvolve in every individual patient whether a given genomics alteration is a driver event.MethodsHere, we develop a novel data-driven approach to identify shared oncogenic expression signatures among tumors. We aim to identify gene onco-signature for classifying tumor patients in homogeneous subclasses with distinct prognoses and specific genomic alterations. We derive expression pan-cancer onco-signatures from TCGA gene expression data using a discovery set of 9107 primary pan-tumor samples together with respective matched mutational data and a list of known cancer-related genes from COSMIC database.ResultsWe use the derived ono-signatures to state their prognostic significance and apply them to the TCGA breast cancer dataset as proof of principle of our approach. We uncover a mitochondrial sub-group of Luminal patients characterized by its biological features and regulated by specific genetic modulators. Collectively, our results demonstrate the effectiveness of onco-signatures-based methodologies, and they also contribute to a comprehensive understanding of the metabolic heterogeneity of Luminal tumors.ConclusionsThese findings provide novel genomics evidence for developing personalized breast cancer patient treatments. The onco-signature approach, demonstrated here on breast cancer, is general and can be applied to other cancer types.

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