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Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species

Understanding relationships between spontaneous cancer in companion (pet) canines and humans can facilitate biomarker and drug development in both species. Towards this end we developed an experimental-bioinformatic protocol that analyzes canine transcriptomics data in the context of existing human...

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Autores principales: Tawa, Gregory J., Braisted, John, Gerhold, David, Grewal, Gurmit, Mazcko, Christina, Breen, Matthew, Sittampalam, Gurusingham, LeBlanc, Amy K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8523068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34570764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009450
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author Tawa, Gregory J.
Braisted, John
Gerhold, David
Grewal, Gurmit
Mazcko, Christina
Breen, Matthew
Sittampalam, Gurusingham
LeBlanc, Amy K.
author_facet Tawa, Gregory J.
Braisted, John
Gerhold, David
Grewal, Gurmit
Mazcko, Christina
Breen, Matthew
Sittampalam, Gurusingham
LeBlanc, Amy K.
author_sort Tawa, Gregory J.
collection PubMed
description Understanding relationships between spontaneous cancer in companion (pet) canines and humans can facilitate biomarker and drug development in both species. Towards this end we developed an experimental-bioinformatic protocol that analyzes canine transcriptomics data in the context of existing human data to evaluate comparative relevance of canine to human cancer. We used this protocol to characterize five canine cancers: melanoma, osteosarcoma, pulmonary carcinoma, B- and T-cell lymphoma, in 60 dogs. We applied an unsupervised, iterative clustering method that yielded five co-expression modules and found that each cancer exhibited a unique module expression profile. We constructed cancer models based on the co-expression modules and used the models to successfully classify the canine data. These canine-derived models also successfully classified human tumors representing the same cancers, indicating shared cancer biology between canines and humans. Annotation of the module genes identified cancer specific pathways relevant to cells-of-origin and tumor biology. For example, annotations associated with melanin production (PMEL, GPNMB, and BACE2), synthesis of bone material (COL5A2, COL6A3, and COL12A1), synthesis of pulmonary surfactant (CTSH, LPCAT1, and NAPSA), ribosomal proteins (RPL8, RPS7, and RPLP0), and epigenetic regulation (EDEM1, PTK2B, and JAK1) were unique to melanoma, osteosarcoma, pulmonary carcinoma, B- and T-cell lymphoma, respectively. In total, 152 biomarker candidates were selected from highly expressing modules for each cancer type. Many of these biomarker candidates are under-explored as drug discovery targets and warrant further study. The demonstrated transferability of classification models from canines to humans enforces the idea that tumor biology, biomarker targets, and associated therapeutics, discovered in canines, may translate to human medicine.
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spelling pubmed-85230682021-10-19 Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species Tawa, Gregory J. Braisted, John Gerhold, David Grewal, Gurmit Mazcko, Christina Breen, Matthew Sittampalam, Gurusingham LeBlanc, Amy K. PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Understanding relationships between spontaneous cancer in companion (pet) canines and humans can facilitate biomarker and drug development in both species. Towards this end we developed an experimental-bioinformatic protocol that analyzes canine transcriptomics data in the context of existing human data to evaluate comparative relevance of canine to human cancer. We used this protocol to characterize five canine cancers: melanoma, osteosarcoma, pulmonary carcinoma, B- and T-cell lymphoma, in 60 dogs. We applied an unsupervised, iterative clustering method that yielded five co-expression modules and found that each cancer exhibited a unique module expression profile. We constructed cancer models based on the co-expression modules and used the models to successfully classify the canine data. These canine-derived models also successfully classified human tumors representing the same cancers, indicating shared cancer biology between canines and humans. Annotation of the module genes identified cancer specific pathways relevant to cells-of-origin and tumor biology. For example, annotations associated with melanin production (PMEL, GPNMB, and BACE2), synthesis of bone material (COL5A2, COL6A3, and COL12A1), synthesis of pulmonary surfactant (CTSH, LPCAT1, and NAPSA), ribosomal proteins (RPL8, RPS7, and RPLP0), and epigenetic regulation (EDEM1, PTK2B, and JAK1) were unique to melanoma, osteosarcoma, pulmonary carcinoma, B- and T-cell lymphoma, respectively. In total, 152 biomarker candidates were selected from highly expressing modules for each cancer type. Many of these biomarker candidates are under-explored as drug discovery targets and warrant further study. The demonstrated transferability of classification models from canines to humans enforces the idea that tumor biology, biomarker targets, and associated therapeutics, discovered in canines, may translate to human medicine. Public Library of Science 2021-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8523068/ /pubmed/34570764 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009450 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tawa, Gregory J.
Braisted, John
Gerhold, David
Grewal, Gurmit
Mazcko, Christina
Breen, Matthew
Sittampalam, Gurusingham
LeBlanc, Amy K.
Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
title Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
title_full Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
title_fullStr Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
title_short Transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
title_sort transcriptomic profiling in canines and humans reveals cancer specific gene modules and biological mechanisms common to both species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8523068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34570764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009450
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