Author:
Sheng Guangying,Li Fuyu,Jin Wen,Wang Kankan
Abstract
AbstractThe chromosome 20 long arm (20q) is one of the genomic hotspots where copy number alterations frequently occur in multiple types of tumors. However, it remains elusive which genes are implicated in 20q-related tumorigenesis. Here, by querying TCGA and GEO databases, we observed frequent copy number amplification at 20q and the chromosome subband 20q13.33 was amplificated in multiple cancers. Among those genes at 20q13.33, PSMA7 was found with the strongest correlation with cancers. Further analysis revealed that PSMA7 amplification was the most frequent genetic alteration event conferring adverse prognosis in various cancers. Consistent with the strong positive correlation between PSMA7 amplification and gene expression, elevated PSMA7 expression was observed in 20 of 33 types of cancers with a close link to adverse outcomes in certain tumors. In addition, PSMA7 was essential for the growth of almost 1095 cancer lines. Mechanistically, aberrant PSMA7 most probably influenced the proteasome and protease-related pathways to promote tumorigenesis and might be antagonized by several compounds, e.g., Docetaxel in relevant cancers. The current in-depth pan-cancer analysis refines our understanding of the crucial oncogenic role of copy number amplifications at PSMA7 loci at the novel chromosome amplicon 20q13.33 across different tumors.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National Key R&D Program of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC