Abstract

The role of genetic components in cancer development is an area of interest for cancer biologists in general. Intriguingly, some genes have both oncogenic and tumor-suppressor functions. In this study, we systematically identified these genes through database search and text mining. We find that most of them are transcription factors or kinases and exhibit dual biological functions, e.g., that they both positively and negatively regulate transcription in cells. Some cancer types such as leukemia are over-represented by them, whereas some common cancer types such as lung cancer are under-represented by them. Across 12 major cancer types, while their genomic mutation patterns are similar to that of oncogenes, their expression patterns are more similar to that of tumor-suppressor genes. Their expression profile in six human organs propose that they mainly function as tumor suppressor in normal tissue. Our network analyses further show they have higher network degrees than both oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes and thus tend to be the hub genes in the protein–protein interaction network. Our mutation, expression spectrum, and network analyses might help explain why some cancer types are specifically associated with them. Finally, our results suggest that the functionally altering mutations in “double-agent” genes and oncogenes are the main driving force in cancer development, because non-silent mutations are biasedly distributed toward these two gene sets across all 12 major cancer types.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a series of diseases featured with abnormal cell growth and the potential of spreading to the other body parts

  • In 12 major cancer types, their mutation patterns resembled those of oncogenes, while their expression patterns were more similar to those of tumor-suppressor genes

  • Through database search and literature annotation, we identified 83 POTSF genes, 1320 ONCs, and 952 Tumor-suppressor genes (TSGs) in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a series of diseases featured with abnormal cell growth and the potential of spreading to the other body parts. The cells of the multicellular organisms harbor both oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes. The former could cause normal cell to grow out of control and become cancer, while the latter protects them from degenerating into cancer cells. They appear to be two antithetical gene categories in oncogenesis. Some genes exhibit both oncogenic and tumor-suppressor functions[2,3,4,5].

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