Abstract

Immune response-related genes play a major role in colorectal carcinogenesis by mediating inflammation or immune-surveillance evasion. Although remarkable progress has been made to investigate the underlying mechanism, the understanding of the complicated carcinogenesis process was enormously hindered by large-scale tumor heterogeneity. Development and carcinogenesis share striking similarities in their cellular behavior and underlying molecular mechanisms. The association between embryonic development and carcinogenesis makes embryonic development a viable reference model for studying cancer thereby circumventing the potentially misleading complexity of tumor heterogeneity. Here we proposed that the immune genes, responsible for intra-immune cooperativity disorientation (defined in this study as disruption of developmental expression correlation patterns during carcinogenesis), probably contain untapped prognostic resource of colorectal cancer. In this study, we determined the mRNA expression profile of 137 human biopsy samples, including samples from different stages of human colonic development, colorectal precancerous progression and colorectal cancer samples, among which 60 were also used to generate miRNA expression profile. We originally established Spearman correlation transition model to quantify the cooperativity disorientation associated with the transition from normal to precancerous to cancer tissue, in conjunction with miRNA-mRNA regulatory network and machine learning algorithm to identify genes with prognostic value. Finally, a 12-gene signature was extracted, whose prognostic value was evaluated using Kaplan–Meier survival analysis in five independent datasets. Using the log-rank test, the 12-gene signature was closely related to overall survival in four datasets (GSE17536, n = 177, p = 0.0054; GSE17537, n = 55, p = 0.0039; GSE39582, n = 562, p = 0.13; GSE39084, n = 70, p = 0.11), and significantly associated with disease-free survival in four datasets (GSE17536, n = 177, p = 0.0018; GSE17537, n = 55, p = 0.016; GSE39582, n = 557, p = 4.4e-05; GSE14333, n = 226, p = 0.032). Cox regression analysis confirmed that the 12-gene signature was an independent factor in predicting colorectal cancer patient’s overall survival (hazard ratio: 1.759; 95% confidence interval: 1.126–2.746; p = 0.013], as well as disease-free survival (hazard ratio: 2.116; 95% confidence interval: 1.324–3.380; p = 0.002).

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in men (746,000 cases, 10.0% of all cancers) and the second in women (614,000 cases, 9.2% of the all cancers) worldwide [1]

  • Tumor heterogeneity develops through a sequence of events, guided by clonal selection, where genomic instability contributes to generating a diverse cell population that is subject to selection in a micro-environmental or therapeutic context [9]

  • Genes differentially expressed between normal and CRC tissue are significantly enriched for the Reactome term “signaling in immune system”

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in men (746,000 cases, 10.0% of all cancers) and the second in women (614,000 cases, 9.2% of the all cancers) worldwide [1]. Embryonic development and carcinogenesis share many other similarities with respect to cellular behavior, including epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) [14], mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition (MET) [15], and immune-surveillance evasion [16]. Taken together, these findings offer convincing evidence that tumor can be viewed as an aberrant organ that has acquired the capacity for indefinite proliferation through accumulated strikes [17], and that the molecular events which deviate tumor cells from the normal developmental path, are probably accountable for cancer initiation and progression

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