Abstract

DMD gene mutations have been associated with the development of Dystrophinopathies. Interestingly, it has been recently reported that DMD is involved in the development and progression of myogenic tumors, assigning DMD a tumor suppressor activity in these types of cancer. However, there are only few reports that analyze DMD in non-myogenic tumors. Our study was designed to examine DMD expression and genetic alterations in non-myogenic tumors using public repositories. We also evaluated the overall survival of patients with and without DMD mutations. We studied 59 gene expression microarrays (GEO database) and RNAseq (cBioPortal) datasets that included 9817 human samples. We found reduced DMD expression in 15/27 (56%) pairwise comparisons performed (Fold-Change (FC) ≤ 0.70; p-value range = 0.04-1.5×10−20). The analysis of RNAseq studies revealed a median frequency of DMD genetic alterations of 3.4%, higher or similar to other well-known tumor suppressor genes. In addition, we observed significant poorer overall survival for patients with DMD mutations. The analyses of paired tumor/normal tissues showed that the majority of tumor specimens had lower DMD expression compared to their normal adjacent counterpart. Interestingly, statistical significant over-expression of DMD was found in 6/27 studies (FC ≥ 1.4; p-value range = 0.03-3.4×10−15). These results support that DMD expression and genetic alterations are frequent and relevant in non-myogenic tumors. The study and validation of DMD as a new player in tumor development and as a new prognostic factor for tumor progression and survival are warranted.

Highlights

  • Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) gene (Xp21.2-p21.1, OMIM #300377) spans 2.4 Mb

  • We found lower DMD expression in melanoma compared to normal skin

  • Previous reports showed a high frequency of DMD intragenic deletions that were associated with the progression of myogenic tumors [4,5,6, 15]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

DMD gene (Xp21.2-p21.1, OMIM #300377) spans 2.4 Mb. DMD gene (Xp21.2-p21.1, OMIM #300377) spans 2.4 Mb It contains 79 exons, eight different promoters that regulate tissue-specific expression, multiple alternative splicing and polyadenylation sites that give rise to, at least, 15 different DMD isoforms. The DMD skeletal muscle isoform is the best characterized and its main function is well-known. This protein interacts with actin fibers from the cytoskeleton and with the Dystrophin-Associated Glycoproteins complex (DAG). These interactions link the cytoplasm to the extracellular matrix, and play a major role in maintaining sarcolemma membrane stability and organization, cell signaling, regulating the intracellular calcium and muscle homeostasis [1]. The function of the other dystrophin isoforms remains to be fully elucidated

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call