Cargando…

Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression

Melanoma is among the most malignant cutaneous cancers and when metastasized results in dramatically high mortality. Despite advances in high-throughput gene expression profiling in cancer transcriptomic studies, our understanding of mechanisms driving melanoma progression is still limited. We prese...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Singh, Komudi, Baird, Michelle, Fischer, Robert, Chaitankar, Vijender, Seifuddin, Fayaz, Chen, Yun-Ching, Tunc, Ilker, Waterman, Clare M., Pirooznia, Mehdi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7072154/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32079144
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12020458
_version_ 1783506339854548992
author Singh, Komudi
Baird, Michelle
Fischer, Robert
Chaitankar, Vijender
Seifuddin, Fayaz
Chen, Yun-Ching
Tunc, Ilker
Waterman, Clare M.
Pirooznia, Mehdi
author_facet Singh, Komudi
Baird, Michelle
Fischer, Robert
Chaitankar, Vijender
Seifuddin, Fayaz
Chen, Yun-Ching
Tunc, Ilker
Waterman, Clare M.
Pirooznia, Mehdi
author_sort Singh, Komudi
collection PubMed
description Melanoma is among the most malignant cutaneous cancers and when metastasized results in dramatically high mortality. Despite advances in high-throughput gene expression profiling in cancer transcriptomic studies, our understanding of mechanisms driving melanoma progression is still limited. We present here an in-depth bioinformatic analysis of the melanoma RNAseq, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)seq, and single-cell (sc)RNA seq data to understand cancer progression. Specifically, we have performed a consensus network analysis of RNA-seq data from clinically re-grouped melanoma samples to identify gene co-expression networks that are conserved in early (stage 1) and late (stage 4/invasive) stage melanoma. Overlaying the fold-change information on co-expression networks revealed several coordinately up or down-regulated subnetworks that may play a critical role in melanoma progression. Furthermore, by incorporating histone lysine-27 acetylation information and highly expressed genes identified from the single-cell RNA data from melanoma patient samples, we present a comprehensive list of pathways, putative protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and transcription factor (TF) networks that are driving cancer progression. From this analysis, we have identified Elk1, AP1 and E12 TF networks that coordinately change expression in late melanoma when compared to early melanoma, implicating these TFs in melanoma progression. Additionally, the sumoylation-associated interactome is upregulated in invasive melanoma. Together, this bioinformatic analysis potentially implicates a combination of TF networks and PPIs in melanoma progression, which if confirmed in the experimental systems, could be used as targets for drug intervention in melanoma.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7072154
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-70721542020-03-19 Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression Singh, Komudi Baird, Michelle Fischer, Robert Chaitankar, Vijender Seifuddin, Fayaz Chen, Yun-Ching Tunc, Ilker Waterman, Clare M. Pirooznia, Mehdi Cancers (Basel) Article Melanoma is among the most malignant cutaneous cancers and when metastasized results in dramatically high mortality. Despite advances in high-throughput gene expression profiling in cancer transcriptomic studies, our understanding of mechanisms driving melanoma progression is still limited. We present here an in-depth bioinformatic analysis of the melanoma RNAseq, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)seq, and single-cell (sc)RNA seq data to understand cancer progression. Specifically, we have performed a consensus network analysis of RNA-seq data from clinically re-grouped melanoma samples to identify gene co-expression networks that are conserved in early (stage 1) and late (stage 4/invasive) stage melanoma. Overlaying the fold-change information on co-expression networks revealed several coordinately up or down-regulated subnetworks that may play a critical role in melanoma progression. Furthermore, by incorporating histone lysine-27 acetylation information and highly expressed genes identified from the single-cell RNA data from melanoma patient samples, we present a comprehensive list of pathways, putative protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and transcription factor (TF) networks that are driving cancer progression. From this analysis, we have identified Elk1, AP1 and E12 TF networks that coordinately change expression in late melanoma when compared to early melanoma, implicating these TFs in melanoma progression. Additionally, the sumoylation-associated interactome is upregulated in invasive melanoma. Together, this bioinformatic analysis potentially implicates a combination of TF networks and PPIs in melanoma progression, which if confirmed in the experimental systems, could be used as targets for drug intervention in melanoma. MDPI 2020-02-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7072154/ /pubmed/32079144 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12020458 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Singh, Komudi
Baird, Michelle
Fischer, Robert
Chaitankar, Vijender
Seifuddin, Fayaz
Chen, Yun-Ching
Tunc, Ilker
Waterman, Clare M.
Pirooznia, Mehdi
Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression
title Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression
title_full Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression
title_fullStr Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression
title_full_unstemmed Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression
title_short Misregulation of ELK1, AP1, and E12 Transcription Factor Networks Is Associated with Melanoma Progression
title_sort misregulation of elk1, ap1, and e12 transcription factor networks is associated with melanoma progression
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7072154/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32079144
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12020458
work_keys_str_mv AT singhkomudi misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT bairdmichelle misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT fischerrobert misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT chaitankarvijender misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT seifuddinfayaz misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT chenyunching misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT tuncilker misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT watermanclarem misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression
AT piroozniamehdi misregulationofelk1ap1ande12transcriptionfactornetworksisassociatedwithmelanomaprogression