A Whole-Transcriptomic Analysis of Canine Oral Melanoma: A Chance to Disclose the Radiotherapy Effect and Outcome-Associated Gene Signature

Author:

Mucignat Greta1,Montanucci Ludovica2,Elgendy Ramy3,Giantin Mery1ORCID,Laganga Paola4,Pauletto Marianna1ORCID,Mutinelli Franco5ORCID,Vascellari Marta5ORCID,Leone Vito Ferdinando4,Dacasto Mauro1ORCID,Granato Anna5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Comparative Biomedicine and Food Science, University of Padua, Agripolis Legnaro, 35020 Padua, Italy

2. McGovern Medical School and Center for Neurogenomics, UTHealth, University of Texas Houston, Houston, TX 77030, USA

3. Discovery Sciences, Centre for Genomics Research, AstraZeneca, 411 10 Gothenburg, Sweden

4. Anicura—Centro Oncologico Veterinario, Sasso Marconi, 40037 Bologna, Italy

5. Veterinary and Public Health Institute, Legnaro, 35020 Padua, Italy

Abstract

Oral melanoma (OM) is the most common malignant oral tumour among dogs and shares similarities with human mucosal melanoma (HMM), validating the role of canine species as an immunocompetent model for cancer research. In both humans and dogs, the prognosis is poor and radiotherapy (RT) represents a cornerstone in the management of this tumour, either as an adjuvant or a palliative treatment. In this study, by means of RNA-seq, the effect of RT weekly fractionated in 9 Gray (Gy), up to a total dose of 36 Gy (4 weeks), was evaluated in eight dogs affected by OM. Furthermore, possible transcriptomic differences in blood and biopsies that might be associated with a longer overall survival (OS) were investigated. The immune response, glycosylation, cell adhesion, and cell cycle were the most affected pathways by RT, while tumour microenvironment (TME) composition and canonical and non-canonical WNT pathways appeared to be modulated in association with OS. Taking these results as a whole, this study improved our understanding of the local and systemic effect of RT, reinforcing the pivotal role of anti-tumour immunity in the control of canine oral melanoma (COM).

Funder

Italian Ministry of Health

University of Padua

Fatima Al Fihri Erasmus Mundus Scholarship Program, Action 2, EMA2, Lot 1

Italian Association for the Research on Cancer

Publisher

MDPI AG

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