Abstract
BackgroundLong-term differential expression of disease-associated genes is a crucial driver of pathological changes in mucinous gastric carcinoma. Therefore, there should be a correlation between depth features extracted from pathology-based full-scan images using deep learning and disease-associated gene expression. This study tried to provides preliminary evidence that long-term differentially expressed (disease-associated) genes lead to subtle changes in disease pathology by exploring their correlation, and offer a new ideas for precise analysis of pathomics and combined analysis of pathomics and genomics. MethodsFull pathological scans, gene sequencing data, and clinical data of patients with mucinous gastric carcinoma were downloaded from TCGA data. The VGG-16 network architecture was used to construct a binary classification model to explore the potential of VGG-16 applications and extract the deep features of the pathology-based full-scan map. Differential gene expression analysis was performed and a protein-protein interaction network was constructed to screen disease-related core genes. Differential, Lasso regression, and extensive correlation analyses were used to screen for valuable deep features. Finally, a correlation analysis was used to determine whether there was a correlation between valuable deep features and disease-related core genes. ResultThe accuracy of the binary classification model was 0.775 ± 0.129. A total of 24 disease-related core genes were screened, including ASPM, AURKA, AURKB, BUB1, BUB1B, CCNA2, CCNB1, CCNB2, CDCA8, CDK1, CENPF, DLGAP5, KIF11, KIF20A, KIF2C, KIF4A, MELK, PBK, RRM2, TOP2A, TPX2, TTK, UBE2C, and ZWINT. In addition, differential, Lasso regression, and extensive correlation analyses were used to screen eight valuable deep features, including features 51, 106, 109, 118, 257, 282, 326, and 487. Finally, the results of the correlation analysis suggested that valuable deep features were either positively or negatively correlated with core gene expression. ConclusionThe preliminary results of this study support our hypotheses. Deep learning may be an important bridge for the joint analysis of pathomics and genomics and provides preliminary evidence for long-term abnormal expression of genes leading to subtle changes in pathology.
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