Back to Search Start Over

The apoptotic machinery as a biological complex system: analysis of its omics and evolution, identification of candidate genes for fourteen major types of cancer, and experimental validation in CML and neuroblastoma

Authors :
Li Destri Giovanni
Santagati Maria
Bertuccio Taschia
Cafiso Viviana
La Cava Piera
Palumbo Giuseppe A
Tandurella Igor
Triberio Patrizio
D'Agostino Vito
Valenti Salvo
Pernagallo Salvo
Tomasello Luisa
Salito Loredana
Statello Luisa
Scalia Marina
Angelica Rosario
Majorana Alessandra
Guglielmino Maria R
Duro Laura R
Barbagallo Davide
Ragusa Marco
Di Pietro Cinzia
Lanzafame Salvatore
Di Raimondo Francesco
Stefani Stefania
Mishra Bud
Purrello Michele
Source :
BMC Medical Genomics, Vol 2, Iss 1, p 20 (2009)
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
BMC, 2009.

Abstract

Abstract Background Apoptosis is a critical biological phenomenon, executed under the guidance of the Apoptotic Machinery (AM), which allows the physiologic elimination of terminally differentiated, senescent or diseased cells. Because of its relevance to BioMedicine, we have sought to obtain a detailed characterization of AM Omics in Homo sapiens, namely its Genomics and Evolution, Transcriptomics, Proteomics, Interactomics, Oncogenomics, and Pharmacogenomics. Methods This project exploited the methodology commonly used in Computational Biology (i.e., mining of many omics databases of the web) as well as the High Throughput biomolecular analytical techniques. Results In Homo sapiens AM is comprised of 342 protein-encoding genes (possessing either anti- or pro-apoptotic activity, or a regulatory function) and 110 MIR-encoding genes targeting them: some have a critical role within the system (core AM nodes), others perform tissue-, pathway-, or disease-specific functions (peripheral AM nodes). By overlapping the cancer type-specific AM mutation map in the fourteen most frequent cancers in western societies (breast, colon, kidney, leukaemia, liver, lung, neuroblastoma, ovary, pancreas, prostate, skin, stomach, thyroid, and uterus) to their transcriptome, proteome and interactome in the same tumour type, we have identified the most prominent AM molecular alterations within each class. The comparison of the fourteen mutated AM networks (both protein- as MIR-based) has allowed us to pinpoint the hubs with a general and critical role in tumour development and, conversely, in cell physiology: in particular, we found that some of these had already been used as targets for pharmacological anticancer therapy. For a better understanding of the relationship between AM molecular alterations and pharmacological induction of apoptosis in cancer, we examined the expression of AM genes in K562 and SH-SY5Y after anticancer treatment. Conclusion We believe that our data on the Apoptotic Machinery will lead to the identification of new cancer genes and to the discovery of new biomarkers, which could then be used to profile cancers for diagnostic purposes and to pinpoint new targets for pharmacological therapy. This approach could pave the way for future studies and applications in molecular and clinical Medicine with important perspectives both for Oncology as for Regenerative Medicine.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17558794
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Medical Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6ea86dfc5c514059b4b318f1aa3ac160
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1755-8794-2-20