Author:
Gong Xue,Wu Ruihong,Zhang Yuannv,Zhao Wenyuan,Cheng Lixin,Gu Yunyan,Zhang Lin,Wang Jing,Zhu Jing,Guo Zheng
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Hundreds of genes that are causally implicated in oncogenesis have been found and collected in various databases. For efficient application of these abundant but diverse data sources, it is of fundamental importance to evaluate their consistency.
Results
First, we showed that the lists of cancer genes from some major data sources were highly inconsistent in terms of overlapping genes. In particular, most cancer genes accumulated in previous small-scale studies could not be rediscovered in current high-throughput genome screening studies. Then, based on a metric proposed in this study, we showed that most cancer gene lists from different data sources were highly functionally consistent. Finally, we extracted functionally consistent cancer genes from various data sources and collected them in our database F-Census.
Conclusions
Although they have very low gene overlapping, most cancer gene data sources are highly consistent at the functional level, which indicates that they can separately capture partial genes in a few key pathways associated with cancer. Our results suggest that the sample sizes currently used for cancer studies might be inadequate for consistently capturing individual cancer genes, but could be sufficient for finding a number of cancer genes that could represent functionally most cancer genes. The F-Census database provides biologists with a useful tool for browsing and extracting functionally consistent cancer genes from various data sources.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Structural Biology
Reference53 articles.
1. Vogelstein B, Kinzler KW: Cancer genes and the pathways they control. Nat Med 2004, 10: 789–799. 10.1038/nm1087
2. Sjoblom T: Systematic analyses of the cancer genome: lessons learned from sequencing most of the annotated human protein-coding genes. Curr Opin Oncol 2008, 20: 66–71. 10.1097/CCO.0b013e3282f31108
3. Furney SJ, Madden SF, Kisiel TA, Higgins DG, Lopez-Bigas N: Distinct patterns in the regulation and evolution of human cancer genes. In Silico Biol 2008, 8: 33–46.
4. Furney SJ, Higgins DG, Ouzounis CA, Lopez-Bigas N: Structural and functional properties of genes involved in human cancer. BMC Genomics 2006, 7: 3. 10.1186/1471-2164-7-3
5. Furney SJ, Calvo B, Larranaga P, Lozano JA, Lopez-Bigas N: Prioritization of candidate cancer genes--an aid to oncogenomic studies. Nucleic Acids Res 2008, 36: e115. 10.1093/nar/gkn482
Cited by
44 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献