Systematic identification of genes with a cancer-testis expression pattern in 19 cancer types

Cancer-testis ( CT ) genes represent the similarity between the processes of spermatogenesis and tumorigenesis. It is possible that their selective expression pattern can help identify driver genes in cancer. In this study, we integrate transcriptomics data from multiple databases and systematically...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2016-01, Vol.7 (1), p.10499-12, Article 10499
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Cheng, Gu, Yayun, Zhang, Kai, Xie, Kaipeng, Zhu, Meng, Dai, Ningbin, Jiang, Yue, Guo, Xuejiang, Liu, Mingxi, Dai, Juncheng, Wu, Linxiang, Jin, Guangfu, Ma, Hongxia, Jiang, Tao, Yin, Rong, Xia, Yankai, Liu, Li, Wang, Shouyu, Shen, Bin, Huo, Ran, Wang, Qianghu, Xu, Lin, Yang, Liuqing, Huang, Xingxu, Shen, Hongbing, Sha, Jiahao, Hu, Zhibin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cancer-testis ( CT ) genes represent the similarity between the processes of spermatogenesis and tumorigenesis. It is possible that their selective expression pattern can help identify driver genes in cancer. In this study, we integrate transcriptomics data from multiple databases and systematically identify 876 new CT genes in 19 cancer types. We explore their relationship with testis-specific regulatory elements. We propose that extremely highly expressed CT genes (EECTGs) are potential drivers activated through epigenetic mechanisms. We find mutually exclusive associations between EECTGs and somatic mutations in mutated genes, such as PIK3CA in breast cancer. We also provide evidence that promoter demethylation and close non-coding RNAs (namely, CT-ncRNAs) may be two mechanisms to reactivate EECTG gene expression. We show that the meiosis-related EECTG ( MEIOB ) and its nearby CT-ncRNA have a role in tumorigenesis in lung adenocarcinoma. Our findings provide methods for identifying epigenetic-driver genes of cancer, which could serve as targets of future cancer therapies. Genes normally expressed in the testis but aberrantly expressed in cancer are termed cancer testis antigens. In this study, the authors catalogue the expression of these genes in 19 different cancer types and correlate expression with some somatically mutated oncogenes.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms10499