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Identification and analysis of dysregulated fatty acid metabolism genes in breast cancer subtypes.

Umar YousufShazia SofiAanisa MakhdoomiManzoor Ahmad Mir
Published in: Medical oncology (Northwood, London, England) (2022)
Breast cancer is one of the most aggressive and lethal types of transformation among women. An anomaly of normal fatty acid metabolism is acknowledged as a critical trigger for malignant transformations including breast cancer, but the prospect of targeting fatty acid metabolism for the treatment of malignancy has remained unrecognized so far. It has been observed that specific fatty acid metabolism genes are involved in the commencement and development of breast cancer. These specific genes have also been observed to be related to different isotypes/molecular subtypes of breast cancer. The main purpose of this study was to scrutinize the prognostic significance, functional role, and expression pattern of fatty acid metabolism genes. In-Silico tools like TCGA BrCA, Gepia2, Ualcan Analysis, UCSC Xena, Kaplan-Meier plotter, Bc-gene EXminer, String, gene ontology, and KEGG databases, were used to assess the expression pattern of the fatty acid metabolism genes in breast cancer patients and also among the different molecular sub-types of breast cancer. Differential gene expression analysis revealed dysregulation of FABP4, FABP5, PLIN1, PLIN2, PLIN4, PLIN5, LPIN1, MGLL, PNPLA2, PNPLA7, ACSL1, and ACOX2 showing a fold change >  ± 1.5. Also, most of these genes show downregulation in Ualcan analysis of different isotypes/molecular subtypes of breast cancer. The study reveals that the screened genes i.e., FABP4, FABP5, PLIN1, PLIN2, PLIN4, PLIN5, LPIN1, MGLL, PNPLA2, PNPLA7, ACSL1, and ACOX2 can be used as biomarkers that reveal poor prognosis and may serve as therapeutic targets for the treatment of breast cancer.
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