Frontiers in Oncology (Sep 2022)

Brain metastases: It takes two factors for a primary cancer to metastasize to brain

  • Dingyun Liu,
  • Dingyun Liu,
  • Jun Bai,
  • Jun Bai,
  • Qian Chen,
  • Qian Chen,
  • Renbo Tan,
  • Renbo Tan,
  • Zheng An,
  • Zheng An,
  • Jun Xiao,
  • Jun Xiao,
  • Yingwei Qu,
  • Yingwei Qu,
  • Ying Xu,
  • Ying Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.1003715
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Brain metastasis of a cancer is a malignant disease with high mortality, but the cause and the molecular mechanism remain largely unknown. Using the samples of primary tumors of 22 cancer types in the TCGA database, we have performed a computational study of their transcriptomic data to investigate the drivers of brain metastases at the basic physics and chemistry level. Our main discoveries are: (i) the physical characteristics, namely electric charge, molecular weight, and the hydrophobicity of the extracellular structures of the expressed transmembrane proteins largely affect a primary cancer cell’s ability to cross the blood-brain barrier; and (ii) brain metastasis may require specific functions provided by the activated enzymes in the metastasizing primary cancer cells for survival in the brain micro-environment. Both predictions are supported by published experimental studies. Based on these findings, we have built a classifier to predict if a given primary cancer may have brain metastasis, achieving the accuracy level at AUC = 0.92 on large test sets.

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