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Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Previous relations between microRNA machinery gene variants and human cancer risk have not reach the required statistical power. For the first time, the authors pooled data from 33 studies in “The Cancer Genome Atlas” database that cover 8176 pan-cancer samples which yielded 22 eligi...

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Autores principales: Elshazli, Rami M., Toraih, Eman A., Hussein, Mohammad H., Ruiz, Emmanuelle M., Kandil, Emad, Fawzy, Manal S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9856462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36672288
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020338
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author Elshazli, Rami M.
Toraih, Eman A.
Hussein, Mohammad H.
Ruiz, Emmanuelle M.
Kandil, Emad
Fawzy, Manal S.
author_facet Elshazli, Rami M.
Toraih, Eman A.
Hussein, Mohammad H.
Ruiz, Emmanuelle M.
Kandil, Emad
Fawzy, Manal S.
author_sort Elshazli, Rami M.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Previous relations between microRNA machinery gene variants and human cancer risk have not reach the required statistical power. For the first time, the authors pooled data from 33 studies in “The Cancer Genome Atlas” database that cover 8176 pan-cancer samples which yielded 22 eligible variants within 11 genes subjected to further testing under different genetic association models, Cox regression, and trail sequential analyses. The potential roles of miRNA biogenesis genes in cancer development and prognosis have been concluded. ABSTRACT: Single nucleotide polymorphisms in genes involved in microRNA processing/maturation and release may deregulate the microRNAome expression levels. We aimed to assess the relationship between miRNA machinery genetic variants and human cancer risk using integrative bioinformatics analyses to identify the role of these genes in cancer aggressiveness. Mutations of 8176 pan-cancer samples were retrieved from 33 studies in “TCGA” database, and a Cox regression model for survival was performed. Next, 22 computationally identified variants within 11 genes were selected based on their high citation rate and MAF. Relevant articles through March 2020 were included. Pooled estimates under the five genetic association models were calculated. Publication bias and heterogeneity between articles were evaluated. Trial Sequential Analysis (TSA) was applied to assess the power and reliability of the draw conclusions. TCGA patients with different cancer types revealed significant alterations in miRNA machinery genes, with mutation frequency ranging from 0.6–13% of samples. RAN was associated with LN metastasis, while TARBP2 and PIWIL1 gene mutations exhibited better overall survival. In the meta-analysis, 45 articles (74,593 cases and 89,198 controls) met the eligibility criteria. Pooled analysis revealed an increased cancer risk with DROSHArs10719*G, RANrs3803012*G, DGCR8rs417309*A, and GEMIN3rs197414*A. In contrast, both DICER1rs1057035*T and GEMIN4rs2743048*G conferred protection against developing cancer. TSA showed the cumulative evidence is inadequate, and the addition of further primary studies is necessary. This study suggests a potential role of miRNA biogenesis genes in cancer development/prognosis. Further functional studies may reveal biological explanations for the differential risks of the machinery variants in different cancer types.
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spelling pubmed-98564622023-01-21 Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis Elshazli, Rami M. Toraih, Eman A. Hussein, Mohammad H. Ruiz, Emmanuelle M. Kandil, Emad Fawzy, Manal S. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Previous relations between microRNA machinery gene variants and human cancer risk have not reach the required statistical power. For the first time, the authors pooled data from 33 studies in “The Cancer Genome Atlas” database that cover 8176 pan-cancer samples which yielded 22 eligible variants within 11 genes subjected to further testing under different genetic association models, Cox regression, and trail sequential analyses. The potential roles of miRNA biogenesis genes in cancer development and prognosis have been concluded. ABSTRACT: Single nucleotide polymorphisms in genes involved in microRNA processing/maturation and release may deregulate the microRNAome expression levels. We aimed to assess the relationship between miRNA machinery genetic variants and human cancer risk using integrative bioinformatics analyses to identify the role of these genes in cancer aggressiveness. Mutations of 8176 pan-cancer samples were retrieved from 33 studies in “TCGA” database, and a Cox regression model for survival was performed. Next, 22 computationally identified variants within 11 genes were selected based on their high citation rate and MAF. Relevant articles through March 2020 were included. Pooled estimates under the five genetic association models were calculated. Publication bias and heterogeneity between articles were evaluated. Trial Sequential Analysis (TSA) was applied to assess the power and reliability of the draw conclusions. TCGA patients with different cancer types revealed significant alterations in miRNA machinery genes, with mutation frequency ranging from 0.6–13% of samples. RAN was associated with LN metastasis, while TARBP2 and PIWIL1 gene mutations exhibited better overall survival. In the meta-analysis, 45 articles (74,593 cases and 89,198 controls) met the eligibility criteria. Pooled analysis revealed an increased cancer risk with DROSHArs10719*G, RANrs3803012*G, DGCR8rs417309*A, and GEMIN3rs197414*A. In contrast, both DICER1rs1057035*T and GEMIN4rs2743048*G conferred protection against developing cancer. TSA showed the cumulative evidence is inadequate, and the addition of further primary studies is necessary. This study suggests a potential role of miRNA biogenesis genes in cancer development/prognosis. Further functional studies may reveal biological explanations for the differential risks of the machinery variants in different cancer types. MDPI 2023-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9856462/ /pubmed/36672288 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020338 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Elshazli, Rami M.
Toraih, Eman A.
Hussein, Mohammad H.
Ruiz, Emmanuelle M.
Kandil, Emad
Fawzy, Manal S.
Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis
title Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis
title_full Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis
title_fullStr Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis
title_short Pan-Cancer Study on Variants of Canonical miRNA Biogenesis Pathway Components: A Pooled Analysis
title_sort pan-cancer study on variants of canonical mirna biogenesis pathway components: a pooled analysis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9856462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36672288
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020338
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