EBioMedicine (Sep 2018)

Capturing functional long non-coding RNAs through integrating large-scale causal relations from gene perturbation experimentsResearch in context

  • Jinyuan Xu,
  • Aiai Shi,
  • Zhilin Long,
  • Liwen Xu,
  • Gaoming Liao,
  • Chunyu Deng,
  • Min Yan,
  • Aiming Xie,
  • Tao Luo,
  • Jian Huang,
  • Yun Xiao,
  • Xia Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35
pp. 369 – 380

Abstract

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Characterizing functions of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) remains a major challenge, mostly due to the lack of lncRNA-involved regulatory relationships. A wide array of genome-wide expression profiles generated by gene perturbation have been widely used to capture causal links between perturbed genes and response genes. Through annotating >600 gene perturbation profiles, over 354,000 causal relationships between perturbed genes and lncRNAs were identified. This large-scale resource of causal relations inspired us to develop a novel computational approach LnCAR for inferring lncRNAs' functions, which showed a higher accuracy than the co-expression based approach. By application of LnCAR to the cancer hallmark processes, we identified 38 lncRNAs involved in distinct carcinogenic processes. The “activating invasion & metastasis” related lncRNAs were strongly associated with metastatic progression in various cancer types and could act as a predictor of cancer metastasis. Meanwhile, the “evading immune destruction” related lncRNAs showed significant associations with immune infiltration of various immune cells and, importantly, can predict response to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy, suggesting their potential roles as biomarkers for immune therapy. Taken together, our approach provides a novel way to systematically reveal functions of lncRNAs, which will be helpful for further experimental exploration and clinical translational research of lncRNAs. Keywords: lncRNA, Function, Gene perturbation, Cancer, Immunotherapy