PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Comparative analysis of protein-protein interaction networks in metastatic breast cancer.

  • Hossein Hozhabri,
  • Roxana Sadat Ghasemi Dehkohneh,
  • Seyed Morteza Razavi,
  • S Mostafa Razavi,
  • Fatemeh Salarian,
  • Azade Rasouli,
  • Jalil Azami,
  • Melika Ghasemi Shiran,
  • Zahra Kardan,
  • Negar Farrokhzad,
  • Arsham Mikaeili Namini,
  • Ali Salari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
p. e0260584

Abstract

Read online

Metastatic lesions leading causes of the majority of deaths in patients with the breast cancer. The present study aimed to provide a comprehensive analysis of the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the brain (MDA-MB-231 BrM2) and lung (MDA-MB-231 LM2) metastatic cell lines obtained from breast cancer patients compared with those who have primary breast cancer. We identified 981 and 662 DEGs for brain and lung metastasis, respectively. Protein-protein interaction (PPI) analysis revealed seven shared (PLCB1, FPR1, FPR2, CX3CL1, GABBR2, GPR37, and CXCR4) hub genes between brain and lung metastasis in breast cancer. Moreover, GNG2 and CXCL8, C3, and PTPN6 in the brain and SAA1 and CCR5 in lung metastasis were found as unique hub genes. Besides, five co-regulation of clusters via seven important co-expression genes (COL1A2, LUM, SPARC, THBS2, IL1B, CXCL8, THY1) were identified in the brain PPI network. Clusters screening followed by biological process (BP) function and pathway enrichment analysis for both metastatic cell lines showed that complement receptor signalling, acetylcholine receptor signalling, and gastric acid secretion pathways were common between these metastases, whereas other pathways were site-specific. According to our findings, there are a set of genes and functional pathways that mark and mediate breast cancer metastasis to the brain and lungs, which may enable us understand the molecular basis of breast cancer development in a deeper levele to the brain and lungs, which may help us gain a more complete understanding of the molecular underpinnings of breast cancer development.