PeerJ (Jul 2020)

An RNA-sequencing-based transcriptome for a significantly prognostic novel driver signature identification in bladder urothelial carcinoma

  • Danqi Liu,
  • Boting Zhou,
  • Rangru Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9422
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
p. e9422

Abstract

Read online Read online

Bladder cancer (BC) is the ninth most common malignancy worldwide. Bladder urothelial carcinoma (BLCA) constitutes more than 90% of bladder cancer (BC). The five-year survival rate is 5–70%, and patients with BLCA have a poor clinical outcome. The identification of novel clinical molecular markers in BLCA is still urgent to allow for predicting clinical outcomes. This study aimed to identify a novel signature integrating the three-dimension transcriptome of protein coding genes, long non-coding RNAs, microRNAs that is related to the overall survival of patients with BLCA, contributing to earlier prediction and effective treatment selection, as well as to the verification of the established model in the subtypes identified. Gene expression profiling and the clinical information of 400 patients diagnosed with BLCA were retrieved from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database. A univariate Cox regression analysis, robust likelihood-based survival modelling analysis and random forests for survival regression and classification algorithms were used to identify the critical biomarkers. A multivariate Cox regression analysis was utilized to construct a risk score formula with a maximum area under the curve (AUC = 0.7669 in the training set). The significant signature could classify patients into high-risk and low-risk groups with significant differences in overall survival time. Similar results were confirmed in the test set (AUC = 0.645) and in the entire set (AUC = 0.710). The multivariate Cox regression analysis indicated that the five-RNA signature was an independent predictive factor for patients with BLCA. Non-negative matrix factorization and a similarity network fusion algorithm were applied for identifying three molecular subtypes. The signature could separate patients in every subtype into high- and low- groups with a distinct difference. Gene set variation analysis of protein-coding genes associated with the five prognostic RNAs demonstrated that the co-expressed protein-coding genes were involved in the pathways and biological process of tumourigenesis. The five-RNA signature could serve as to some degree a reliable independent signature for predicting outcome in patients with BLCA.

Keywords