Frontiers in Medicine (Oct 2021)
Construction and Identification of a Novel 5-Gene Signature for Predicting the Prognosis in Breast Cancer
Abstract
Background: Breast cancer is one of the most common malignancies in women worldwide. The purpose of this study was to identify the hub genes and construct prognostic signature that could predict the survival of patients with breast cancer (BC).Methods: We identified differentially expressed genes between the responder group and non-responder group based on the GEO cohort. Drug-resistance hub genes were identified by weighted gene co-expression network analysis, and a multigene risk model was constructed by univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis based on the TCGA cohort. Immune cell infiltration and mutation characteristics were analyzed.Results: A 5-gene signature (GP6, MAK, DCTN2, TMEM156, and FKBP14) was constructed as a prognostic risk model. The 5-gene signature demonstrated favorable prediction performance in different cohorts, and it has been confirmed that the signature was an independent risk indicater. The nomogram comprising 5-gene signature showed better performance compared with other clinical features, Further, in the high-risk group, high M2 macrophage scores were related with bad prognosis, and the frequency of TP53 mutations was greater in the high-risk group than in the low-risk group. In the low-risk group, high CD8+ T cell scores were associated with a good prognosis, and the frequency of CDH1 mutations was greater in the low-risk group than that in the high-risk group. At the same time, patients in the low risk group have a good response to immunotherapy in terms of immunotherapy. The results of immunohistochemistry showed that MAK, GP6, and TEMEM156 were significantly highly expressed in tumor tissues, and DCTN2 was highly expressed in normal tissues.Conclusions: Our study may find potential new targets against breast cancer, and provide new insight into the underlying mechanisms.
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