A Comprehensive Pan-Cancer Analysis Identifies CEP55 as a Potential Oncogene and Novel Therapeutic Target

Emerging research findings have shown that a centrosomal protein ( ) is a potential oncogene in numerous human malignancies. Nevertheless, no pan-cancer analysis has been conducted to investigate the various aspects and behavior of this oncogene in different human cancerous tissues. Numerous databas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diagnostics (Basel) 2023-05, Vol.13 (9), p.1613
Hauptverfasser: Zaki, Mohamed Samir A, Eldeen, Muhammad Alaa, Abdulsahib, Waleed K, Shati, Ayed A, Alqahtani, Youssef A, Al-Qahtani, Saleh M, Otifi, Hassan M, Asiri, Ashwag, Hassan, Hesham M, Emam Mohammed Ahmed, Hebatallah, Dawood, Samy A, Negm, Amr, Eid, Refaat A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emerging research findings have shown that a centrosomal protein ( ) is a potential oncogene in numerous human malignancies. Nevertheless, no pan-cancer analysis has been conducted to investigate the various aspects and behavior of this oncogene in different human cancerous tissues. Numerous databases were investigated to conduct a detailed analysis of CEP55. Initially, we evaluated the expression of in several types of cancers and attempted to find the correlation between that and the stage of the examined malignancies. Then, we conducted a survival analysis to determine the relationship between overexpression in malignancies and the patient's survival. Furthermore, we examined the genetic alteration forms and the methylation status of this oncogene. Additionally, the interference of expression with immune cell infiltration, the response to various chemotherapeutic agents, and the putative molecular mechanism of in tumorigenesis were investigated. The current study found that was upregulated in cancerous tissues versus normal controls where this upregulation was correlated with a poor prognosis in multiple forms of human cancers. Additionally, it influenced the level of different immune cell infiltration and several chemokines levels in the tumor microenvironment in addition to the response to several antitumor drugs. Herein, we provide an in-depth understanding of the oncogenic activities of CEP55, identifying it as a possible predictive marker as well as a specific target for developing anticancer therapies.
ISSN:2075-4418
2075-4418
DOI:10.3390/diagnostics13091613