Cancer type classification using plasma cell-free RNAs derived from human and microbes

Author:

Chen Shanwen12,Jin Yunfan3,Wang Siqi3,Xing Shaozhen3,Wu Yingchao1,Tao Yuhuan3,Ma Yongchen1,Zuo Shuai1,Liu Xiaofan3,Hu Yichen4,Chen Hongyan5,Luo Yuandeng6,Xia Feng6,Xie Chuanming6,Yin Jianhua7,Wang Xin8,Liu Zhihua5,Zhang Ning2,Zech Xu Zhenjiang4910ORCID,Lu Zhi John3,Wang Pengyuan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of General Surgery, Peking University First Hospital

2. Translational Cancer Research Center, Peking University First Hospital

3. MOE Key Laboratory of Bioinformatics, Center for Synthetic and Systems Biology, School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University

4. State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Nanchang University

5. State Key Laboratory of Molecular Oncology, National Cancer Center/National Clinical Research Center for Cancer/Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College

6. Institute of Hepatobiliary Surgery, The First Hospital Affiliated to Army Medical University

7. Department of Epidemiology, Faculty of Navy Medicine, Navy Medical University

8. Department of Breast Surgical Oncology, National Cancer Center/National Clinical Research Center for Cancer /Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College

9. Shenzhen Stomatology Hospital (Pingshan), Southern Medical University

10. Microbiome Medicine Center, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Zhujiang Hospital, Southern Medical University

Abstract

The utility of cell-free nucleic acids in monitoring cancer has been recognized by both scientists and clinicians. In addition to human transcripts, a fraction of cell-free nucleic acids in human plasma were proven to be derived from microbes and reported to have relevance to cancer. To obtain a better understanding of plasma cell-free RNAs (cfRNAs) in cancer patients, we profiled cfRNAs in ~300 plasma samples of 5 cancer types (colorectal cancer, stomach cancer, liver cancer, lung cancer, and esophageal cancer) and healthy donors (HDs) with RNA-seq. Microbe-derived cfRNAs were consistently detected by different computational methods when potential contaminations were carefully filtered. Clinically relevant signals were identified from human and microbial reads, and enriched Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathways of downregulated human genes and higher prevalence torque teno viruses both suggest that a fraction of cancer patients were immunosuppressed. Our data support the diagnostic value of human and microbe-derived plasma cfRNAs for cancer detection, as an area under the ROC curve of approximately 0.9 for distinguishing cancer patients from HDs was achieved. Moreover, human and microbial cfRNAs both have cancer type specificity, and combining two types of features could distinguish tumors of five different primary locations with an average recall of 60.4%. Compared to using human features alone, adding microbial features improved the average recall by approximately 8%. In summary, this work provides evidence for the clinical relevance of human and microbe-derived plasma cfRNAs and their potential utilities in cancer detection as well as the determination of tumor sites.

Funder

the Capital's Fund for Health Improvement and Research

National Natural Science Foundation of China

the National Key Research and Development Plan of China

the National Science and Technology Major Project of China

the Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program

the Tsinghua-Foshan Innovation Special Fund

the Fok Ying-Tong Education Foundation

the Interdisciplinary Clinical Research Project of Peking University First Hospital

Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Structural Biology

the Bioinformatics Platform of National Center for Protein Sciences

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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