Revealing global regulatory perturbations across human cancers
- PMID: 20005852
- PMCID: PMC2900319
- DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2009.11.016
Revealing global regulatory perturbations across human cancers
Abstract
The discovery of pathways and regulatory networks whose perturbation contributes to neoplastic transformation remains a fundamental challenge for cancer biology. We show that such pathway perturbations, and the cis-regulatory elements through which they operate, can be efficiently extracted from global gene expression profiles. Our approach utilizes information-theoretic analysis of expression levels, pathways, and genomic sequences. Analysis across a diverse set of human cancers reveals the majority of previously known cancer pathways. Through de novo motif discovery we associate these pathways with transcription-factor binding sites and miRNA targets, including those of E2F, NF-Y, p53, and let-7. Follow-up experiments confirmed that these predictions correspond to functional in vivo regulatory interactions. Strikingly, the majority of the perturbations, associated with putative cis-regulatory elements, fall outside of known cancer pathways. Our study provides a systems-level dissection of regulatory perturbations in cancer-an essential component of a rational strategy for therapeutic intervention and drug-target discovery.
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Comment in
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A FIRE-y PAGE in the computational analysis of cancer profiles.Mol Cell. 2009 Dec 11;36(5):732-3. doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2009.11.019. Mol Cell. 2009. PMID: 20005836
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