Abstract

Background: PYGL has been reported as a glycogen degradation-related gene, which is up-regulated in many tumors. This study was designed to investigate the predictive value of high PYGL expression in patients with gliomas through bioinformatics analysis of the gene transcriptome and the single-cell sequencing data.Methods: The gene transcriptome data of 595 glioma patients from the TCGA database and the single-cell RNA sequencing data of 7,930 GBM cells from the GEO database were included in the study. Differential analysis was used to find the distribution of expression of PYGL in different groups of glioma patients. OS analysis was used to assess the influence of the high expression of PYGL on the prognosis of patients. The reliability of its prediction was evaluated by the AUC of ROC and the C-index. The GSEA be used to reveal potential mechanisms. The single-cell analysis was used to observe the high expression of PYGL in different cell groups to further analyze the mechanism of its prediction.Results: Differential analysis identified the expression level of PYGL is positively associated with glioma malignancy. OS analysis and Cox regression analyses showed high expression of PYGL was an independent factor for poor prognosis of gliomas (p < 0.05). The AUC values were 0.838 (1-year ROC), 0.864 (3-year ROC) and 0.833 (5-year ROC). The C index was 0.81. The GSEA showed that gene sets related to MTORC1 signaling, glycolysis, hypoxia, PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling, KRAS signaling up and angiogenesis were differentially enriched in the high PYGL expression phenotype. The single-cell sequencing data analysis showed TAMs and malignant cells in GBM tissues expressed a high level of PYGL.Conclusion: The high expression of PYGL is an independent predictor of poor prognosis in patients with glioma.

Highlights

  • Glioma is the most common primary tumor in the brain and it is one of the most invasive tumors in human beings

  • We demonstrated that tumorassociated macrophages (TAMs) in GBM tissues expressed a high level of PYGL

  • The results showed that PYGL expression was significantly higher in the World Health Organization (WHO) IV grade glioma tissues than that in WHO II grade group (P = 2.85e-56) and WHO III grade group (P = 1.16e-22; Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Glioma is the most common primary tumor in the brain and it is one of the most invasive tumors in human beings. PYGL is one of the gene related to hypoxia metabolism and was found to be up-regulated in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) and breast cancers [5]. It was suggested that the glycogen degradation regulated by PYGL could maintain the proliferation of cancer cells [6]. GYS1 induced glycogen accumulation and promoted tumor progression under hypoxia conditions have been found in many cancer cell lines [8, 9]. PYGL has been reported as a glycogen degradation-related gene, which is up-regulated in many tumors. This study was designed to investigate the predictive value of high PYGL expression in patients with gliomas through bioinformatics analysis of the gene transcriptome and the single-cell sequencing data

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