Discover Oncology (Sep 2024)
A new exploration: characterization of the differentiation trajectory of prostate cancer cells
Abstract
Abstract Prostate cancer is one of the most common malignant tumors in men, and in-depth study of its gene expression patterns is crucial for understanding the formation and development of prostate cancer. Although single-cell transcriptomics has deeply explored the heterogeneous expression characteristics of prostate cancer, given that normal epithelial cells themselves have different states of differentiation, these normal differentiation characteristics may lead to confusion with heterogeneous tumor characteristics. In this study, we used single-cell data from the GEO database to analyze in detail the heterogeneity of prostate cancer tumor cells/tumor-associated epithelium cells (TAECs), with a particular focus on the differentiation state of epithelial cells in matching normal tissue. We found that after subtype pairing analysis of normal tissue and tumor tissue epithelium based on differentiation status, the characteristics identified later were not consistent with the general characteristics originally exhibited by different TAECs subpopulations. Among them, all TAECs subpopulations showed P53 enrichment and downregulation of the apoptotic pathway, and expressed higher levels of EGFR, ERBB2, interferon receptors, MIF, and cell adhesion-related signals; through transcription factor regulatory network analysis, we observed that YY1, NKX3-1, and EHF had higher transcriptional activity in TAECs subpopulations than normal epithelial cells at the same differentiation stage, while ATF3 was the opposite. Among them, YY1 may act as an upstream regulator of the MIF signaling pathway, and ATF3 is a key upstream transcriptional regulator of differentially expressed genes in the P53 and apoptotic pathways. Immune infiltration analysis showed that the above four transcription factors were significantly correlated with the infiltration of immune cells in prostate cancer, and pan-cancer analysis showed that their expression-related survival risks were widely present in different cancers. It is worth noting that this is merely a preliminary, exploratory study, which inevitably has some deficiencies and limitations. Despite this, this study is committed to bringing a novel and unique perspective to the field through this work, with the hope of opening up new levels of understanding and stimulating more in-depth research and discussion.
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