A Personalized Genomics Approach of the Prostate Cancer.
Sanda IacobasDumitru Andrei IacobasPublished in: Cells (2021)
Decades of research identified genomic similarities among prostate cancer patients and proposed general solutions for diagnostic and treatments. However, each human is a dynamic unique with never repeatable transcriptomic topology and no gene therapy is good for everybody. Therefore, we propose the Genomic Fabric Paradigm (GFP) as a personalized alternative to the biomarkers approach. Here, GFP is applied to three (one primary-"A", and two secondary-"B" & "C") cancer nodules and the surrounding normal tissue ("N") from a surgically removed prostate tumor. GFP proved for the first time that, in addition to the expression levels, cancer alters also the cellular control of the gene expression fluctuations and remodels their networking. Substantial differences among the profiled regions were found in the pathways of P53-signaling, apoptosis, prostate cancer, block of differentiation, evading apoptosis, immortality, insensitivity to anti-growth signals, proliferation, resistance to chemotherapy, and sustained angiogenesis. ENTPD2, AP5M1 BAIAP2L1, and TOR1A were identified as the master regulators of the "A", "B", "C", and "N" regions, and potential consequences of ENTPD2 manipulation were analyzed. The study shows that GFP can fully characterize the transcriptomic complexity of a heterogeneous prostate tumor and identify the most influential genes in each cancer nodule.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- radical prostatectomy
- papillary thyroid
- gene expression
- gene therapy
- endothelial cells
- squamous cell
- end stage renal disease
- single cell
- oxidative stress
- transcription factor
- lymph node metastasis
- dna methylation
- chronic kidney disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- poor prognosis
- newly diagnosed
- genome wide
- rna seq
- copy number
- risk assessment
- signaling pathway
- prognostic factors
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- peritoneal dialysis
- human health