Cells with distinct phenotypes including stem-cell-like properties have been proposed to exist in normal human mammary epithelium and breast carcinomas, but their detailed molecular characteristics and clinical significance are unclear. We determined gene expression and genetic profiles of cells purified from cancerous and normal breast tissue using markers previously associated with stem-cell-like properties. CD24+ and CD44+ cells from individual tumors were clonally related but not always identical. CD44+ cell-specific genes included many known stem-cell markers and correlated with decreased patient survival. The TGF-beta pathway was specifically active in CD44+ cancer cells, where its inhibition induced a more epithelial phenotype. Our data suggest prognostic relevance of CD44+ cells and therapeutic targeting of distinct tumor cell populations.
A single cancer cell contains large numbers of genetic alterations that in combination create the malignant phenotype. However, whether amplified and mutated genes form functional and physical interaction networks that could explain the selection for cells with combined alterations is unknown. To investigate this issue, we characterized copy number alterations in 191 breast tumors using dense single nucleotide polymorphism arrays and identified 1,747 genes with copy number gain organized into 30 amplicons. Amplicons were distributed unequally throughout the genome. Each amplicon had distinct enrichment pattern in pathways, networks, and molecular functions, but genes within individual amplicons did not form coherent functional units. Genes in amplicons included all major tumorigenic pathways and were highly enriched in breast cancer-causative genes. In contrast, 1,188 genes with somatic mutations in breast cancer were distributed randomly over the genome, did not represent a functionally cohesive gene set, and were relatively less enriched in breast cancer marker genes. Mutated and gained genes did not show statistically significant overlap but were highly synergistic in populating key tumorigenic pathways including transforming growth factor B, WNT, fibroblast growth factor, and PIP3 signaling. In general, mutated genes were more frequently upstream of gained genes in transcription regulation signaling than vice versa, suggesting that mutated genes are mainly regulators, whereas gained genes are mostly regulated. ESR1 was the major transcription factor regulating amplified but not mutated genes. Our results support the hypothesis that multiple genetic events, including copy number gains and somatic mutations, are necessary for establishing the malignant cell phenotype. [Cancer Res 2008;68(22):9532-40]
The authors have previously applied two integrated platforms, MetaCore and MetaDrug, for the assembly and analysis of human biological networks as a useful method for the integration and functional interpretation of high-throughput experimental data. The present study demonstrates in detail the specific algorithms that are used in both software platforms. Using a standard set of genes as input, namely CYP3A4 (an enzyme), PXR (a nuclear hormone receptor), MDR1 (a transporter) and hERG (an ion channel) related to the absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion and toxicity (ADME/Tox) of xenobiotics, we have now generated networks with each algorithm. The relative advantages and disadvantages of these algorithms are explained using these examples as well as appropriate instances of utility to illustrate further the particular circumstances for their use. In addition, the benefits of the different network algorithms are identified when compared with algorithms available in other products, where this information is available.
Background: Astrocyte activation is a characteristic response to injury in the central nervous system, and can be either neurotoxic or neuroprotective, while the regulation of both roles remains elusive.
Gene expression signatures of toxicity and clinical response benefit both safety assessment and clinical practice; however, difficulties in connecting signature genes with the predicted end points have limited their application. The Microarray Quality Control Consortium II (MAQCII) project generated 262 signatures for ten clinical and three toxicological end points from six gene expression data sets, an unprecedented collection of diverse signatures that has permitted a wide-ranging analysis on the nature of such predictive models. A comprehensive analysis of the genes of these signatures and their nonredundant unions using ontology enrichment, biological network building and interactome connectivity analyses demonstrated the link between gene signatures and the biological basis of their predictive power. Different signatures for a given end point were more similar at the level of biological properties and transcriptional control than at the gene level. Signatures tended to be enriched in function and pathway in an end point and model-specific manner, and showed a topological bias for incoming interactions. Importantly, the level of biological similarity between different signatures for a given end point correlated positively with the accuracy of the signature predictions. These findings will aid the understanding, and application of predictive genomic signatures, and support their broader application in predictive medicine.
Protein interactions are the basic building blocks for assembly of pathways and networks. Almost any biologically meaningful functionality (for instance, linear signaling pathways, chains of metabolic reactions, transcription factor dimmers, protein complexes of transcriptosome, gene-disease associations) can be represented as a combination of binary relationships between "network objects" (genes, proteins, RNA species, bioactive compounds). Naturally, the assembled pathways and networks are only as good as their "weakest" link (i.e., a wrongly assigned interaction), and the errors multiply in multi-step pathways. Therefore, the utility of "systems biology" is fundamentally dependent on quality and relevance of protein interactions. The second important parameter is the sheer number of interactions assembled in the database. One needs a "critical mass" of species-specific interactions in order to build cohesive networks for a gene list, not a constellation of non-connected proteins and protein pairs. The third issue is semantic consistency between interactions of different types. Transient physical signal transduction interactions, reactions of endogenous metabolism, transcription factor-promoter binding, and kinetic drug-target interactions are all very different in nature. Yet, they have to fit well into one database format and be consistent in order to be useful in reconstruction of cellular processes.High-quality protein interactions are available in peer-reviewed "small experiment" literature and, to a much smaller extent, patents. However, it is very challenging to find the interactions, annotate with searchable (and computable) parameters, catalogue in the database format in computer readable form, and assemble into a database. There are hundreds of thousands of mammalian interactions scattered in tens of thousands of papers in a few thousands of scientific journals. There are no widely used standards for reporting the interactions in scientific texts and, therefore, text-mining tools have only limited applicability. In order to generate a meaningful database of protein interactions, one needs a well-developed technology of manual curation, equipped with computational solutions, managerial procedures, quality control, and users' feedback. Here we describe our ever-evolving annotation approach, the important annotation issues and our solutions, and the mammalian protein interactions database MetaBase which we have been working on for over 8 years.
MetaMiner (CF) is a data analysis platform for a broad range of CF researchers including wet lab biologists, bioinformaticians, clinicians, and chemists. To understand disease mechanisms and gain insight into complex biological actions, analysis of even simple gene interactions often requires integration of a variety of separate data resources such as literature, 3D molecular models, metabolic pathways, ontologies, small molecules, and drugs. Large-scale data sets from high-throughput screening assays, microarrays, and other data intensive procedures present an even greater challenge in data handling and analysis which now requires interdisciplinary teams of scientists with strikingly diverse backgrounds including computer scientists, statisticians, biologists, and clinicians. To address the issues raised by the complexity of analysis and resource limitations of many research laboratories, MetaMiner (CF) was developed by GeneGo under direction and funding of Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Therapeutics. The platform was designed to provide the CF community with a single tool for analyzing experimental data in a disease-centered environment. To that end, the most important biological and chemical experimental data available today in cystic fibrosis research have been assembled and integrated with data analysis and visualization tools to highlight the key pathways leading to and perturbed by the disease. GeneGo developers assembled and edited CF-specific content and designed the disease-specific interface under the guidance and review of a team of leading cystic fibrosis experts. Updates and revisions will be processed quarterly under the direction of the CF Foundation Therapeutics.
Background: Despite a growing number of studies evaluating cancer of prostate (CaP) specific gene alterations, oncogenic activation of the ETS Related Gene (ERG) by gene fusions remains the most validated cancer gene alteration in CaP. Prevalent gene fusions have been described between the ERG gene and promoter upstream sequences of androgen-inducible genes, predominantly TMPRSS2 (transmembrane protease serine 2). Despite the extensive evaluations of ERG genomic rearrangements, fusion transcripts and the ERG oncoprotein, the prognostic value of ERG remains to be better understood. Using gene expression dataset from matched prostate tumor and normal epithelial cells from an 80 GeneChip experiment examining 40 tumors and their matching normal pairs in 40 patients with known ERG status, we conducted a cancer signaling-focused functional analysis of prostatic carcinoma representing moderate and aggressive cancers stratified by ERG expression.Results: In the present study of matched pairs of laser capture microdissected normal epithelial cells and well-to-moderately differentiated tumor epithelial cells with known ERG gene expression status from 20 patients with localized prostate cancer, we have discovered novel ERG associated biochemical networks.Conclusions: Using causal network reconstruction methods, we have identified three major signaling pathways related to MAPK/PI3K cascade that may indeed contribute synergistically to the ERG dependent tumor development. Moreover, the key components of these pathways have potential as biomarkers and therapeutic target for ERG positive prostate tumors.
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