Publications by authors named "V Pancaldi"

In cancer research, the term epigenetics was used in the 1970s in its modern sense encompassing non-genetic events modifying the chromatin state, mainly to oppose the emerging oncogene paradigm. However, starting from the establishment of this prominent concept, the importance of these epigenetic phenomena in cancer rarely led to questioning the causal role of genetic alterations. Only in the last 10 years, the accumulation of problematic data, better experimental technologies, and some ambitious models pushed the idea that epigenetics could be at least as important as genetics in early oncogenesis.

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Background: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide, with poor survival despite recent therapeutic advances. A better understanding of the complexity of the tumor microenvironment is needed to improve patients' outcome.

Methods: We applied a computational immunology approach (involving immune cell proportion estimation by deconvolution, transcription factor activity inference, pathways and immune scores estimations) in order to characterize bulk transcriptomics of 62 primary lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) samples from patients across disease stages.

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Article Synopsis
  • Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer in women, affecting over 2 million annually and leading to 650,000 deaths, but its epigenetic factors are still not fully understood.
  • The study used data from The Cancer Genome Atlas and various omics datasets to identify significant features related to breast cancer, narrowing down from 417,486 to 2,701 relevant markers using advanced analytics methods.
  • Findings revealed that cancer samples exhibited lower gene expression and higher methylation values, with potential regulatory mechanisms involving transcription factors and 3D chromatin structure, indicating fruitful avenues for new biomarkers and treatments.
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Cancer cells are highly plastic, allowing them to adapt to changing conditions. Genes related to basic cellular processes evolved in ancient species, while more specialized genes appeared later with multicellularity (metazoan genes) or even after mammals evolved. Transcriptomic analyses have shown that ancient genes are up-regulated in cancer, while metazoan-origin genes are inactivated.

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Introduction: Advanced cutaneous melanoma is a skin cancer characterized by a poor prognosis and high metastatic potential. During metastatic spread, melanoma cells often undergo dedifferentiation toward an invasive phenotype, resulting in reduced expression of microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF)-dependent melanoma antigens and facilitating immune escape. Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) is known to be a key factor in melanoma dedifferentiation.

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