AI Article Synopsis

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common liver cancer with the highest mortality rate, and its complex nature makes treatment identification challenging.
  • Researchers used data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) for gene co-expression analysis, categorizing samples by risk factors and examining pathways related to different HCC grades.
  • Findings revealed that lower-grade HCC (G1/G2) was linked to metabolism and cell proliferation pathways, while higher-grade HCC (G3/G4) was associated with cell adhesion and p53 signaling, indicating key molecular processes involved in cancer progression across varying risk factors.

Article Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has the highest mortality rate and is the most frequent of liver cancers. The heterogeneity of HCC in its etiology and molecular expression increases the difficulty in identifying possible treatments. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms of HCC across grades, data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) were used for gene co-expression analysis, categorizing each sample into its pre-existing risk factors. The R library BioNERO was used for preprocessing and gene co-expression network construction. For those modules most correlated with a grade, functional enrichments from different databases were then tested, which appeared to have relatively consistent patterns when grouped by G1/G2 and G3/G4. G1/G2 exhibited the involvement of pathways related to metabolism and the PI3K/Akt pathway, which regulates cell proliferation and related pathways, whereas G3/G4 showed the activation of cell adhesion genes and the p53 signaling pathway, which regulates apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and similar processes. Module preservation analysis was then used with the no history dataset as the reference network, which found cell adhesion molecules and cell cycle genes to be preserved across all risk factors, suggesting they are imperative in the development of HCC regardless of potential etiology. Through hierarchical clustering, modules related to the cell cycle, cell adhesion, the immune system, and the ribosome were found to be consistently present across all risk factors, with distinct clusters linked to oxidative phosphorylation in viral HCC and pentose and glucuronate interconversions in non-viral HCC, underscoring their potential roles in cancer progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11505157PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology13100765DOI Listing

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