AI Article Synopsis

  • * The research analyzed 72 cases of angiosarcoma, highlighting overexpressed genes in chemoresistant cases and identifying significant signaling pathway enrichments related to immune responses.
  • * Key findings suggest that certain gene overexpressions are linked to lower chemotherapy sensitivity and poorer survival outcomes, indicating their potential as biomarkers for chemoresistance in angiosarcoma.

Article Abstract

Angiosarcomas, clinically aggressive cancers of endothelial origin, are a rare subtype of soft-tissue sarcomas characterized by resistance to chemotherapy and dismal prognosis. In this study, we aim to identify the transcriptomic biomarkers of chemoresistance in angiosarcoma. We examined 72 cases of Asian angiosarcomas, including 35 cases treated with palliative chemotherapy, integrating information from NanoString gene expression profiling, whole transcriptome profiling (RNA-seq), immunohistochemistry, cell line assays, and clinicopathological data. In the chemoresistant cohort (defined as stable disease or progression), we observed the significant overexpression of genes, including (log2foldchange 3.49, adj. = 0.0112), , , and , accompanied by the significant enrichment of myeloid compartment and cytokine and chemokine signaling pathways, as well as neutrophils and macrophages. RNA-seq data revealed higher expression ( = 0.0008) in tumor tissues over adjacent normal compartments. Immunohistochemistry showed a significant moderate positive correlation between protein and gene expression (r = 0.7016; < 0.00110), while higher protein expression correlated with lower chemotherapeutic sensitivity in patient-derived angiosarcoma cell lines MOLAS and ISOHAS. In addition, mRNA overexpression positively correlated with epithelioid histology ( = 0.007), higher tumor grade ( = 0.0023), non-head and neck location ( = 0.0576), and poorer overall survival outcomes (HR 1.84, 95% CI 1.07-3.18, = 0.0288). There was no association with tumor mutational burden, tumor inflammation signature, the presence of human herpesvirus-7, ultraviolet exposure signature, and metastatic state at diagnosis. In conclusion, overexpression may be a biomarker of chemoresistance and poor prognosis in angiosarcoma. Further investigation is needed to uncover the precise roles and underlying mechanisms of .

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11476974PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms251910863DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gene expression
12
expression
5
high-throughput transcriptomics
4
transcriptomics identifies
4
identifies chemoresistance-associated
4
chemoresistance-associated gene
4
expression signatures
4
signatures human
4
angiosarcoma
4
human angiosarcoma
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!