Transcriptome profiling and network enrichment analyses identify subtype-specific therapeutic gene targets for breast cancer and their microRNA regulatory networks

Author:

Elango RameshORCID,Rashid Sameera,Vishnubalaji Radhakrishnan,Al-Sarraf Reem,Akhtar Mohammed,Ouararhni Khalid,Decock JulieORCID,Albagha Omar M. E.ORCID,Alajez Nehad M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractPrevious studies have suggested that breast cancer (BC) from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) is presented at younger age with advanced tumor stage, indicating underlying biological differences. Given the scant transcriptomic data on BC from the MENA region and to better understand the biology of this disease, we performed mRNA and microRNA (miRNA) transcriptomic profiling on a local cohort of BC (n = 96) from Qatar. Our data revealed the differentially expressed genes and miRNAs as function of BC molecular subtypes (HR+, HER2+, HER2+HR+, and TNBC), tumor grade (GIII vs GI-II), patients’ age (young (≤40) vs old (>40)), and ethnicity (MENA vs non-MENA). Our profiling data revealed close similarity between TNBC and HER2+, while the transcriptome of HER2+HR+tumor was resemblant of that from HR+tumors. Network analysis identified complex miRNA-mRNA regulatory networks in each BC molecular subtype, in highvslow grade tumors, in tumors from young vs old patients, and in tumors from MENA vs non-MENA, thus implicating miRNA-mediated gene regulation as an essential mechanism in shaping the transcriptome of BC. Integration of our transcriptomic data with CRISPR-Cas9 functional screen data and the OncoKB database identified numerous dependencies and therapeutic vulnerabilities in each BC molecular subtype, while CDC123 was functionally validated as potential therapeutic target for TNBC. Cox regression survival analyses identified mRNA and miRNA-based signatures predicative of worse and better relapse free survival (RFS), which were validated in larger BC cohorts. Our data provides comprehensive transcriptomic profiling and unraveled the miRNA-mRNA regulatory networks in BC patients from the region and identified novel actionable gene targets, employing integrated approach. Findings from the current study have potential implications to improve the current standard-of-care for BC from the MENA as well as patients from other ethnicities.

Funder

Qatar National Research Fund

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Immunology

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