AI Article Synopsis

  • Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a serious illness, and researchers wanted to find out which genes are important for understanding how patients do after being diagnosed.
  • They studied data from cancer patients to see how immune cells behave in cancer and normal tissues, and created a model with three key genes that help predict patient outcomes.
  • One of the genes, called GPRC5A, was found to have high levels in tissue samples and was linked to worse patient outcomes and more B cell activity, which may help in developing new treatments.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a malignancy with poor prognosis. This investigation aimed to determine the relevant genes that affect the prognosis of PC and investigate their relationship with immune infiltration.

Methods: : First, we acquired PC single-cell chip data from the GEO database to scrutinize dissimilarities in immune cell infiltration and differential genes between cancerous and adjacent tissues. Subsequently, we combined clinical data from TCGA to identify genes relevant to PC prognosis. Employing Cox and Lasso regression analyses, we constructed a multifactorial Cox prognostic model, which we subsequently confirmed. The prognostic gene expression in PC was authenticated using RT-PCR. Moreover, we employed the TIMER online database to examine the relationship between the expression of prognostic genes and T and B cell infiltration. Additionally, the expression of GPRC5A and its correlation with B cells infiltration and patient prognosis were ascertained in tissue chips using multiple immune fluorescence staining.

Results: The single-cell analysis unveiled dissimilarities in B-cell infiltration between cancerous and neighboring tissues. We developed a prognostic model utilizing three genes, indicating that patients with high-risk scores experienced a more unfavorable prognosis. Immune infiltration analysis revealed a significant correlation among YWHAZ, GPRC5A, and B cell immune infiltration. In tissue samples, GPRC5A exhibited substantial overexpression and a robust association with an adverse prognosis, demonstrating a positive correlation with B cell infiltration.

Conclusion: GPRC5A is an independent risk factor in PC and correlated with B cell immune infiltration in PC. These outcomes indicated that GPRC5A is a viable target for treating PC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11021786PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2024.1283164DOI Listing

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