4.7 Article

Multi-omics analysis of tumor angiogenesis characteristics and potential epigenetic regulation mechanisms in renal clear cell carcinoma

Journal

CELL COMMUNICATION AND SIGNALING
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12964-021-00728-9

Keywords

Tumor angiogenesis; Kidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC); Microenvironment score; Differential methylation sites; Master transcription factors

Categories

Funding

  1. Fujian Natural Sciences Foundation [2017J01203]
  2. Joint Funds for the innovation of science and Technology, Fujian province [2017Y9023]
  3. Fujian Medical University [2020XH004, 2018QH1044, 2016QH032]
  4. Research Project of Shenzhen Health Family Planning System [SZBC2018001]

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This study analyzed tumor angiogenesis subtypes and potential epigenetic regulation mechanisms in KIRC patients, indicating that evaluating the angiogenesis subtypes of KIRC based on an angiogenesis signature with 183 genes may help develop more targeted treatments for KIRC patients.
Background: Tumor angiogenesis, an essential process for cancer proliferation and metastasis, has a critical role in prognostic of kidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC), as well as a target in guiding treatment with antiangiogenic agents. However, tumor angiogenesis subtypes and potential epigenetic regulation mechanisms in KIRC patient remains poorly characterized. System evaluation of angiogenesis subtypes in KIRC patient might help to reveal the mechanisms of KIRC and develop more target treatments for patients. Method: Ten independent tumor angiogenesis signatures were obtained from molecular signatures database (MSigDB) and gene set variation analysis was performed to calculate the angiogenesis score in silico using the Cancer Genome Atlas ( TCGA) KIRC dataset. Tumor angiogenesis subtypes in 539 TCGA-KIRC patients were identified using consensus clustering analysis. The potential regulation mechanisms was studied using gene mutation, copy number variation, and differential methylation analysis (DMA). The master transcription factors (MTF) that cause the difference in tumor angiogenesis signals were completed by transcription factor enrichment analysis. Results: The angiogenesis score of a prognosis related angiogenesis signature including 189 genes was significantly correlated with immune score, stroma score, hypoxia score, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signal score in 539 TCGA KIRC patients. MMRN2, CLEC14A, ACVRL1, EFNB2, and TEK in candidate gene set showed highest correlation coefficient with angiogenesis score in TCGA-KIRC patients. In addition, all of them were associated with overall survival in both TCGA-KIRC and E-MTAB-1980 KIRC data. Clustering analysis based on 183 genes in angiogenesis signature identified two prognosis related angiogenesis subtypes in TCGA KIRC patients. Two clusters also showed different angiogenesis score, immune score, stroma score, hypoxia score, VEGF signal score, and microenvironment score. DMA identified 59,654 differential methylation sites between two clusters and part of these sites were correlated with tumor angiogenesis genes including CDH13, COL4A3, and RHOB. In addition, RFX2, SOX13, and THRA were identified as top three MTF in regulating angiogenesis signature in KIRC patients. Conclusion: Our study indicate that evaluation the angiogenesis subtypes of KIRC based on angiogenesis signature with 183 genes and potential epigenetic mechanisms may help to develop more target treatments for KIRC patients.

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