npj Genomic Medicine (Jan 2021)

Pan-cancer analysis of transcripts encoding novel open-reading frames (nORFs) and their potential biological functions

  • Chaitanya Erady,
  • Adam Boxall,
  • Shraddha Puntambekar,
  • N. Suhas Jagannathan,
  • Ruchi Chauhan,
  • David Chong,
  • Narendra Meena,
  • Apurv Kulkarni,
  • Bhagyashri Kasabe,
  • Kethaki Prathivadi Bhayankaram,
  • Yagnesh Umrania,
  • Adam Andreani,
  • Jean Nel,
  • Matthew T. Wayland,
  • Cristina Pina,
  • Kathryn S. Lilley,
  • Sudhakaran Prabakaran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-020-00167-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Uncharacterized and unannotated open-reading frames, which we refer to as novel open reading frames (nORFs), may sometimes encode peptides that remain unexplored for novel therapeutic opportunities. To our knowledge, no systematic identification and characterization of transcripts encoding nORFs or their translation products in cancer, or in any other physiological process has been performed. We use our curated nORFs database (nORFs.org), together with RNA-Seq data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and Genotype-Expression (GTEx) consortiums, to identify transcripts containing nORFs that are expressed frequently in cancer or matched normal tissue across 22 cancer types. We show nORFs are subject to extensive dysregulation at the transcript level in cancer tissue and that a small subset of nORFs are associated with overall patient survival, suggesting that nORFs may have prognostic value. We also show that nORF products can form protein-like structures with post-translational modifications. Finally, we perform in silico screening for inhibitors against nORF-encoded proteins that are disrupted in stomach and esophageal cancer, showing that they can potentially be targeted by inhibitors. We hope this work will guide and motivate future studies that perform in-depth characterization of nORF functions in cancer and other diseases.