BMC Cancer (Sep 2024)
SEPT9: From pan-cancer to lung squamous cell carcinoma
Abstract
Abstract Background SEPT9 is a pivotal cytoskeletal GTPase that regulates diverse biological processes encompassing mitosis and cytokinesis. While previous studies have implicated SEPT9 in tumorigenesis and development; comprehensive pan-cancer analyses have not been performed. This study aims to systematically explore its role in cancer screening, prognosis, and treatment, addressing this critical gap. Methods Gene and protein expression data containing clinical information were obtained from public databases for pan-cancer analyses. Additionally, clinical samples from 90 patients with lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC) were used to further experimentally validate the clinical significance of SEPT9. In addition, the molecular docking tool was used to analyze the affinities between SEPT9 protein and drugs. Results SEPT9 is highly expressed in various cancers, and its aberrant expression correlates with genetic alternations and epigenetic modifications, leading to adverse clinical outcomes. Take LUSC as an example, additional dataset analyses and immunohistochemical experiments further confirm the diagnostic and prognostic values as well as the clinical relevance of the SEPT9 gene and protein. Functional enrichment, single-cell expression, and immune infiltration analyses revealed that SEPT9 promotes malignant tumor progression and modulates the immune microenvironments, enabling patients to benefit from immunotherapy. Moreover, drug sensitivity and molecular docking analyses showed that SEPT9 is associated with the sensitivity and resistance of multiple drugs and has stable binding activity with them, including Vorinostat and OTS-964. To harness its prognostic and therapeutic potential in LUSC, a mitotic spindle-associated prognostic model including SEPT9, HSF1, ARAP3, KIF20B, FAM83D, TUBB8, and several clinical characteristics, was developed. This model not only improves clinical outcome predictions but also reshapes the immune microenvironment, making immunotherapy more effective for LUSC patients. Conclusion This is the first study to systematically analyze the role of SEPT9 in cancers and innovatively apply the mitotic spindle-associated model to LUSC, fully demonstrating its potential as a valuable biomarker for cancer screening and prognosis, and highlighting its application value in promoting immunotherapy and chemotherapy, particularly for LUSC.
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