AARS2 as a novel biomarker for prognosis and its molecular characterization in pan‐cancer

Introduction The mitochondrial alanyl‐tRNA synthetase 2 (AARS2) as one of aminoacyl‐tRNA synthases (ARSs) performs amino acid transportation and involves protein synthesis. However, its role in cancer remains largely unexplored. Methods In this study, more than 10,000 samples were enrolled to explor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer medicine (Malden, MA) MA), 2023-12, Vol.12 (23), p.21531-21544
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Long, Gao, Jie, Liu, Xudong, Zhang, Feng, Hu, Bowen, Zhang, Huapeng, Wang, Zhihui, Tang, Hongwei, Shi, Ji Hua, Zhang, Shuijun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction The mitochondrial alanyl‐tRNA synthetase 2 (AARS2) as one of aminoacyl‐tRNA synthases (ARSs) performs amino acid transportation and involves protein synthesis. However, its role in cancer remains largely unexplored. Methods In this study, more than 10,000 samples were enrolled to explore genomic alterations, biological function, prognosis, and clinical treatment based on AARS2 across pan‐cancer. The molecular characterization of AARS2 was confirmed in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using proteomics analysis, quantitative real‐time PCR, western blotting, immunohistochemical staining, and cell experiments. Results For genomic landscape, the AARS2 was dramatically upregulated in multiple cancers, which might be mainly caused by copy number alteration rather than mutation and methylation. The abnormal expression of AARS2 was prominently associated with activity of cancer pathways and performed oncogenic roles in most cancers. Systematic experiments in vitro substantiated the elevated expression of AARS2, and the deficiency of it inhibited cell proliferation and cell migration in HCC. Meanwhile, our findings suggested that AARS2 could serve as a novel promising and stable biomarker for assessing prognosis and immunotherapy. Moreover, a variety of therapeutic drugs and targeted pathways were proposed for cancer treatment, which might enhance clinical efficacy. Conclusion The AARS2 could serve as a new oncogenic gene that promotes cell proliferation and migration in HCC. The comprehensive investigations increased the understanding of AARS2 across human cancers and generated beginning insights of AARS2 in genomic landscape, molecular biological function, prognosis, and clinical treatment.
ISSN:2045-7634
2045-7634
DOI:10.1002/cam4.6682