| Literature DB >> 29069864 |
Andres Stucky1, Parish P Sedghizadeh1, Susan Mahabady1, Xuelian Chen1, Cheng Zhang1,2, Gang Zhang1,3, Xi Zhang1,2, Jiang F Zhong1.
Abstract
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) incidence or rates have increased dramatically recently with little improvement in patient outcomes. There is an unmet need in HNSCC to develop reliable molecular markers capable of evaluating patient risks and advising treatments. This review focuses on recent developments in single-cell molecular analysis of cancer, and its applications for HNSCC diagnosis and treatments. For proof of concept, we examined gene expression levels of 62 patients with HNSCC, and correlate the gene expression profiles to single-cell gene expression profiles obtained from a pilot single-cell study of CCR5-positive breast carcinoma cells. The single-cell molecular analyses complemented the lysate data and reveals heterogeneity of oncogenesis pathways with the cancer cell population. Our single-cell molecular analysis indicated that molecular heterogeneity exists in HNSCC and should be addressed in treatment strategy of HNSCC. Single-cell molecular technology can have significant impact on diagnosis, therapeutic decision making, and prognosis of HNSCC.Entities:
Keywords: HNSCC; circulating tumor cells; head and neck cancer; single-cell genomics; squamous cell carcinoma
Year: 2017 PMID: 29069864 PMCID: PMC5641207 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.18021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Heterogeneity of MYC pathway activation in cancer
The MYC pathway is activated in a patient with HNSCC by analysis of the cell lysate. MYC pathway activation was also detected in single CCR5+ breast cancer cells. (A) RNA-seq of a HNSCC lysate shows activation of multiple members in the MYC pathway. (B) Single-cell RNA-seq shows activation of MYC members through VEGFA and SP1. (C) Another single-cell RNA-seq shows activation of the MYC pathway through JUN and VEGFA. This heterogeneity of MYC pathway activation could explain why target therapies based on cell lysate results are often not effective or fail to control the cancers which contain multiple activation patterns of the MYC pathway. Red: upregulation; Green: down-regulation. Up- or down-regulation are calculated with fold difference of expression level cancer lysate/non-cancer lysate or cancer single cell/normal single-cell respectively. Darker color indicates higher fold changes.