Introduction: Gastric cancer (GC) is an aggressive and heterogeneous malignancy marked by cellular and molecular diversity. In GC, cancer cells invade locally in the stomach at stage I and can progress to metastasis in distant organs by stage IV, where it often becomes fatal. Methods: We analyzed gene expression profiles from 719 stage I and stage IV GC patients across seven public datasets, conducting functional enrichment analysis to identify a gene signature linked to disease progression. Additionally, we developed an in vitro model of a simplified extracellular matrix (ECM) for cell-based assays. Results: Our analysis identified a progression-associated gene signature (APOD, COL1A2, FSTL1, GEM, LUM, and SPARC) that characterizes stage IV GC. This signature is associated with ECM organization and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), both of which influence the tumor microenvironment by promoting cell invasion and triggering EMT. Discussion: This gene signature may help identify stage I GC patients at higher risk, offering potential utility in early-stage patient management. Furthermore, our experimental ECM model may serve as a platform for investigating molecular mechanisms underlying metastatic spread in gastric cancer.
Representing ECM composition and EMT pathways in gastric cancer using a new metastatic gene signature / Albano, F.; Russi, S.; Laurino, S.; Mazzone, P.; Di Paola, G.; Zoppoli, P.; Amendola, E.; Balzamo, C.; Bartolo, O.; Ciuffi, M.; Ignomirelli, O.; Sgambato, A.; Galasso, R.; De Felice, M.; Falco, G.; Calice, G.. - In: FRONTIERS IN CELL AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY. - ISSN 2296-634X. - 12:(2024). [10.3389/fcell.2024.1481818]
Representing ECM composition and EMT pathways in gastric cancer using a new metastatic gene signature
Albano F.
Primo
;Zoppoli P.;Balzamo C.;De Felice M.;Falco G.Co-ultimo
;
2024
Abstract
Introduction: Gastric cancer (GC) is an aggressive and heterogeneous malignancy marked by cellular and molecular diversity. In GC, cancer cells invade locally in the stomach at stage I and can progress to metastasis in distant organs by stage IV, where it often becomes fatal. Methods: We analyzed gene expression profiles from 719 stage I and stage IV GC patients across seven public datasets, conducting functional enrichment analysis to identify a gene signature linked to disease progression. Additionally, we developed an in vitro model of a simplified extracellular matrix (ECM) for cell-based assays. Results: Our analysis identified a progression-associated gene signature (APOD, COL1A2, FSTL1, GEM, LUM, and SPARC) that characterizes stage IV GC. This signature is associated with ECM organization and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), both of which influence the tumor microenvironment by promoting cell invasion and triggering EMT. Discussion: This gene signature may help identify stage I GC patients at higher risk, offering potential utility in early-stage patient management. Furthermore, our experimental ECM model may serve as a platform for investigating molecular mechanisms underlying metastatic spread in gastric cancer.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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