Frontiers in Oncology (Dec 2021)

Transcriptional Networks Identify BRPF1 as a Potential Drug Target Based on Inflammatory Signature in Primary Lower-Grade Gliomas

  • Mingyang Xia,
  • Huiyao Chen,
  • Tong Chen,
  • Ping Xue,
  • Xinran Dong,
  • Yifeng Lin,
  • Duan Ma,
  • Wenhao Zhou,
  • Wenhao Zhou,
  • Wenhao Zhou,
  • Wei Shi,
  • Hao Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.766656
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Gliomas are the most common tumors of the central nervous system and are classified into grades I-IV based on their histological characteristics. Lower-grade gliomas (LGG) can be divided into grade II diffuse low-grade gliomas and grade III moderate gliomas and have a relatively good prognosis. However, LGG often develops into high-grade glioma within a few years. This study aimed to construct and identify the prognostic value of an inflammatory signature and discover potential drug targets for primary LGG. We first screened differentially expressed genes in primary LGG (TCGA) compared with normal brain tissue (GTEx) that overlapped with inflammation-related genes from MSigDB. After survival analysis, nine genes were selected to construct an inflammatory signature. LGG patients with a high inflammatory signature score had a poor prognosis, and the inflammatory signature was a strong independent prognostic factor in both the training cohort (TCGA) and validation cohort (CGGA). Compared with the low-inflammatory signature group, differentially expressed genes in the high-inflammatory signature group were mainly enriched in immune-related signaling pathways, which is consistent with the distribution of immune cells in the high- and low-inflammatory signature groups. Integrating driver genes, upregulated genes and drug targets data, bromodomain and PHD finger-containing protein 1 (BRPF1) was selected as a potential drug target. Inhibition of BRPF1 function or knockdown of BRPF1 expression attenuated glioma cell proliferation and colony formation.

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