VIPpred: a novel model for predicting variant impact on phosphorylation events driving carcinogenesis

Author:

Xu Xiaofeng12,Li Ying3ORCID,Chen Taoyu12,Hou Chao12,Yang Liang12,Zhu Peiyu12,Zhang Yi12,Li Tingting1245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Bioinformatics , School of Basic Medical Sciences, , Beijing 100191 , China

2. Peking University Health Science Center , School of Basic Medical Sciences, , Beijing 100191 , China

3. Department of Computer Science and Technology, Taiyuan University of Technology , Taiyuan, Shanxi 030024 , China

4. Key Laboratory for Neuroscience , Ministry of Education/National Health Commission of China, , Beijing 100191 , China

5. Peking University , Ministry of Education/National Health Commission of China, , Beijing 100191 , China

Abstract

Abstract Disrupted protein phosphorylation due to genetic variation is a widespread phenomenon that triggers oncogenic transformation of healthy cells. However, few relevant phosphorylation disruption events have been verified due to limited biological experimental methods. Because of the lack of reliable benchmark datasets, current bioinformatics methods primarily use sequence-based traits to study variant impact on phosphorylation (VIP). Here, we increased the number of experimentally supported VIP events from less than 30 to 740 by manually curating and reanalyzing multi-omics data from 916 patients provided by the Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium. To predict VIP events in cancer cells, we developed VIPpred, a machine learning method characterized by multidimensional features that exhibits robust performance across different cancer types. Our method provided a pan-cancer landscape of VIP events, which are enriched in cancer-related pathways and cancer driver genes. We found that variant-induced increases in phosphorylation events tend to inhibit the protein degradation of oncogenes and promote tumor suppressor protein degradation. Our work provides new insights into phosphorylation-related cancer biology as well as novel avenues for precision therapy.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shanxi Province Science Foundation for Youths

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Molecular Biology,Information Systems

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