4.4 Article

Highly connected, non-redundant microRNA functional control in breast cancer molecular subtypes

Journal

INTERFACE FOCUS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2020.0073

Keywords

micro-RNA; biological networks; hallmarks of cancer; computational oncology; multi-omics

Categories

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia through the Citedras CONACYT program
  2. National Institute of Genomic Medicine, Mixico
  3. Laboratorio Nacional de Ciencias de la Complejidad, from the Universidad Nacional Autinoma de Mixico
  4. 2016 Marcos Moshinsky Fellowship in the Physical Sciences

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Breast cancer is a complex, heterogeneous disease with significant impact on transcriptional regulatory programs, which can be further understood through network biology methods. The identification of cdre-miRs in breast cancer molecular subtypes suggests their potential role in controlling associated biological functions related to cancer hallmarks.
Breast cancer is a complex, heterogeneous disease at the phenotypic and molecular level. In particular, the transcriptional regulatory programs are known to be significantly affected and such transcriptional alterations are able to capture some of the heterogeneity of the disease, leading to the emergence of breast cancer molecular subtypes. Recently, it has been found that network biology approaches to decipher such abnormal gene regulation programs, for instance by means of gene co-expression networks, have been able to recapitulate the differences between breast cancer subtypes providing elements to further understand their functional origins and consequences. Network biology approaches may be extended to include other co-expression patterns, like those found between genes and non-coding transcripts such as microRNAs (miRs). As is known, miRs play relevant roles in the establishment of normal and anomalous transcription processes. Commodore miRs (cdre-miRs) have been defined as miRs that, based on their connectivity and redundancy in co-expression networks, are potential control elements of biological functions. In this work, we reconstructed miR-gene co-expression networks for each breast cancer molecular subtype, from high throughput data in 424 samples from the Cancer Genome Atlas consortium. We identified cdre-miRs in three out of four molecular subtypes. We found that in each subtype, each cdre-miR was linked to a different set of associated genes, as well as a different set of associated biological functions. We used a systematic literature validation strategy, and identified that the associated biological functions to these cdre-miRs are hallmarks of cancer such as angiogenesis, cell adhesion, cell cycle and regulation of apoptosis. The relevance of such cdre-miRs as actionable molecular targets in breast cancer is still to be determined from functional studies.

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