4.8 Article

Systematic illumination of druggable genes in cancer genomes

期刊

CELL REPORTS
卷 38, 期 8, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110400

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资金

  1. Basser Center for BRCA
  2. US National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01CA142776, R01CA190415, R01CA225929, R01CA262070, P50CA083638, P50CA174523]
  3. NIH [P01CA210944, R01CA229803]
  4. Ovarian Cancer Research Alliance
  5. Foundation for Women's Cancer
  6. NIH Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA016520]
  7. Harry Fields Professorship
  8. Abramson Cancer Center

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By integrating multiple druggable genome resources, researchers identified a group of potential druggable genes and analyzed their expression, genomic alterations, cancer dependencies, and therapeutic potentials. The study revealed a significant number of reliably expressed potential druggable genes in major adult cancers, including some understudied genes, providing new opportunities for cancer treatment.
By combining 6 druggable genome resources, we identify 6,083 genes as potential druggable genes (PDGs). We characterize their expression, recurrent genomic alterations, cancer dependencies, and therapeutic potentials by integrating genome, functionome, and druggome profiles across cancers. 81.5% of PDGs are reliably expressed in major adult cancers, 46.9% show selective expression patterns, and 39.1% exhibit at least one recurrent genomic alteration. We annotate a total of 784 PDGs as dependent genes for cancer cell growth. We further quantify 16 cancer-related features and estimate a PDG cancer drug target score (PCDT score). PDGs with higher PCDT scores are significantly enriched for genes encoding kinases and his tone modification enzymes. Importantly, we find that a considerable portion of high PCDT score PDGs are understudied genes, providing unexplored opportunities for drug development in oncology. By integrating the druggable genome and the cancer genome, our study thus generates a comprehensive blueprint of potential druggable genes across cancers.

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