TitleA Focal Adhesion-Related Gene Signature Predicts Prognosis in Glioma and Correlates With Radiation Response and Immune Microenvironment
AuthorsLi, Haonan
Wang, Guohui
Wang, Wenyan
Pan, Jie
Zhou, Huandi
Han, Xuetao
Su, Linlin
Ma, Zhenghui
Hou, Liubing
Xue, Xiaoying
AffiliationHebei Med Univ, Hosp 2, Dept Radiotherapy, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, Peoples R China
Hebei Med Univ, Hosp 2, Dept Cent Lab, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, Peoples R China
Peking Univ, China Japan Friendship Sch Clin Med, Dept Radiat Oncol, Beijing, Peoples R China
Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pathol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
KeywordsBREAST-CANCER CELLS
IMMUNOTHERAPY
EPIDEMIOLOGY
RESISTANCE
CYCLE
BETA
Issue Date22-Sep-2021
PublisherFRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
AbstractBackground Glioma is the most frequent brain malignancy presenting very poor prognosis and high recurrence rate. Focal adhesion complexes play pivotal roles in cell migration and act as hubs of several signaling pathways.</p> Methods We used bioinformatic databases (CGGA, TCGA, and GEO) and identified a focal adhesion-related differential gene expression (FADG) signature by uniCox and LASSO regression analysis. We calculated the risk score of every patient using the regression coefficient value and expression of each gene. Survival analysis, receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC), principal component analysis (PCA), and stratified analysis were used to validate the FADG signature. Then, we conducted GSEA to identify the signaling pathways related to the FADG signature. Correlation analysis of risk scores between the immune checkpoint was performed. In addition, the correlation of risk scores and genes related with DNA repair was performed. CIBERSORT and ssGSEA were used to explore the tumor microenvironment (TME). A nomogram that involved our FADG signature was also constructed.</p> Results In total, 1,726 (528 patients diagnosed with WHO II, 591 WHO III, and 603 WHO IV) cases and 23 normal samples were included in our study. We identified 29 prognosis-related genes in the LASSO analysis and constructed an eight FADG signature. The results from the survival analysis, stratified analysis, ROC curve, and univariate and multivariate regression analysis revealed that the prognosis of the high-risk group was significantly worse than the low-risk group. Correlation analysis between risk score and genes that related with DNA repair showed that the risk score was positively related with BRCA1, BRCA2, RAD51, TGFB1, and TP53. Besides, we found that the signature could predict the prognosis of patients who received radiation therapy. SsGSEA indicated that the high-risk score was positively correlated with the ESTIMATE, immune, and stromal scores but negatively correlated with tumor purity. Notably, patients in the high-risk group had a high infiltration of immunocytes. The correlation analysis revealed that the risk score was positively correlated with B7-H3, CTLA4, LAG3, PD-L1, and TIM3 but inversely correlated with PD-1.</p> Conclusion The FADG signature we constructed could provide a sensitive prognostic model for patients with glioma and contribute to improve immunotherapy management guidelines.</p>
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/626472
ISSN2234-943X
DOI10.3389/fonc.2021.698278
IndexedSCI(E)
Appears in Collections:中日友好医院 

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