Literature DB >> 29254242

A comprehensive genomic meta-analysis identifies confirmatory role of OBSCN gene in breast tumorigenesis.

Barani Kumar Rajendran1, Chu-Xia Deng1.   

Abstract

The giant multifunctional protein "OBSCURIN" is encoded by OBSCN gene and is mostly expressed in cardiac and other skeletal muscles responsible for myofibrils organization. Loss of OBSCURIN affects the entire downstream pathway proteins vital for various cellular functions including cell integration and cell adhesion. The OBSCN gene mutations are more frequently observed in various muscular diseases, and cancers. Nevertheless, the direct role of OBSCN in tumorigenesis remains elusive. Interestingly, in clinical breast cancer samples a significant number of function changing mutations have been identified in OBSCN gene. In this study, we identified a significant role of OBSCN by conducting an integrative analysis of copy number alterations, functional mutations, gene methylation and expression data from various BRCA cancer projects data available on cBioPortal and TCGA firebrowse portal. Finally, we carried out genetic network analysis, which revealed that OBSCN gene plays a significant role in GPCR, RAS, p75 or Wnt signaling pathways. Similarly, OBSCN gene interacts with many cancer-associated genes involved in breast tumorigenesis. The OBSCN gene probably regulates breast cancer progression and metastasis and the prognostic molecular signatures such as copy number alterations and gene expression of OBSCN may serve as a tool to identify breast tumorigenesis and metastasis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  EMT; OBSCN gene; OBSCURIN; breast cancer; cell adhesion

Year:  2017        PMID: 29254242      PMCID: PMC5731952          DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20404

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncotarget        ISSN: 1949-2553


INTRODUCTION

Cancer in humans is a huge health burden in modern era worldwide. In recent years cancer genomics is assumed as a latest advancement in cancer research, which starts from disease identification and leads to personalized therapy. Owing to this scientific advancement, several key genetic elements have been identified and characterized in various cancer types. In human carcinogenesis events, cells lose their adhesion, integrity and others morphological characteristics and gain the invasive and migratory properties leading to cellular transitions which are called epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is the most crucial step in initiating cancer metastasis [1, 2]. Large number of genes and their corresponding proteins are involved in EMT associated pathway including OBSCURIN. The giant OBSCURIN is encoded by unique gene called OBSCN located on chromosome 1 at loci q42 [3]. The giant OBSCURIN has two isoforms namely OBSCURIN-A & B [4-6]. The OBSCURIN-A comprises of immunoglobulin (Ig) and fibronectin type-III domains located in the amino terminal while in carboxyl terminal contains several signaling domains including Isoleucin & Glutamine calmodulin-binding (IQ), SRC homology-3 (SH3) domains, pleckstrin homology (PH) and a Rho-guanine nucleotide exchange factor (Rho-GEF) domains which are scattered in the non-modular sequences. The OBSCURIN-B or myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) isoform contains two serine/threonine kinase (STK) domains, which replace the non-modular carboxyl terminus of OBSCURIN-A. Additional to these domains, ERK kinase domain exists for phosphorylation along with two Ig domains [3, 4, 7, 8]. Every OBSCURIN domain regulates vast number of cellular and functional roles such as cell adhesion, migration and cell morphology, etc. Apart from these functional roles, OBSCURIN-A/B are also involved in cellular co-ordination that prevents cells from going in an EMT process [4, 9]. OBSCURIN MLCK family domains chiefly maintain the cellular organizations and contractility [10]. Moreover, a huge number of copy number alterations and mutations were observed in OBSCN gene in many cancer types, although, OBSCN is highly mutated in breast cancer. The main study is to uncover the functional mutations and the active role of OBSCN in breast tumorigenesis. A few studies on this gene also proved that, the reduced or altered OBSCN gene expression largely disturbs the cellular integration and activates cancer initiation; therefore, OBSCN may function as a tumor suppressor gene and prevent cellular transition [11, 12]. OBSCN gene is mostly expressed in many cancer types although the real functional association in cancer is still uncertain. Several studies on OBSCN gene mutations revealed potential roles of OBSCURIN in melanoma, glioblastoma, colorectal, lung, breast and pancreatic cancer [13-15]. Also, our recent study on breast cancer driver mutations genes also emphasized OBSCN as one among the 63 top candidate driver genes [16]. Here we will mainly focus on copy number variation, non-silent mutations, promotor methylation followed by epigenetic changes and their consequences in breast cancer formation.

Mutations and expression of OBSCN: genetic predisposition to tumorigenesis

Recent advances in high throughput sequencing support genomics in a magnificent way. In every cancer, vast numbers of genes are mutated, therefore the identification of real genetic elements responsible for carcinogenesis becomes quiet challenging. OBSCN gene is frequently and consistently mutated in various cancers with a strong correlation with breast, colorectal and other female related cancers. Recent studies revealed that TP53 and OBSCN genes are highly mutated among 189 candidate genes in breast and colorectal cancers [13, 17]. However, scientific background on OBSCN mutation and its impacts are limited in comparison to the other key genes involved in breast cancer [18, 19]. Mutations in OBSCN gene (> 15%) are observed in breast cancer patient samples published by TCGA. Furthermore, a recent study on OBSCN gene in breast cancer revealed that the loss of giant OBSCURIN protein increases the cell migration with more metastatic characteristics [20]. However, recent studies revealed that OBSCURIN expression loss causes functional abnormality, which increases the probability of cancer in human breast epithelial cells. Perry et al. (2012) found that knocking down OBSCN significantly affected breast epithelial cells in both growth and biological property, such as cellular adhesions, cell-cell communications, etc. As a result, expression level of other interlinked proteins such as E-cadherin, α and β-catenin involved in cell-cell junctions were largely affected. Meanwhile, an elevated level of p120-catenin prevents the cell adhesion and stimulates mesenchymal proteins, which stimulate cellular morphogenesis leading to metastasis [21-23]. The actin and microtubule cytoskeleton dysregulation is responsible for cellular transformation and migration found in many cancers and activation and deactivation of Rho-GTPase family proteins majorly regulates actin filaments through Ras homolog gene family, member A (RHOA) signaling. The loss of OBSCN caused RHOA signaling impairment leading to breast cancer initiation, progression and metastasis. [12, 24–28]. The consequent event of OBSCN loss may also affect tubulin microtentacles (McTN) formation. McTN is the key process in metastatic breast cancer and it increases metastatic probability and endothelial coupling followed by circulating tumor cells (CTC) [29-31]. Similarly, low levels of epithelial proteins accelerate phenotypic changes in cells, which further affect focal adhesion and increase of F-actin dynamics in cell-cell contacts [28]. Another interesting study proved that, an active oncogene, K-RAS in the OBSCN knockdown cells increases tumorigenesis probability [9]. The OBSCN down regulation also affected RHOA-mediated pathways leading to dramatic reduction of Rho activated kinase (ROCK) and its targeting proteins such as myosin light chain (MLC), lim kinase (LimK) and cofilin [4, 8, 22, 29, 30]. In this study, we reviewed and analyzed OBSCN gene and its association with breast cancer. The high throughput sequencing data for breast cancer mutations in clinical samples were retrieved from various breast cancer projects available in cBioPortal (www.cbioportal.org), Pan-Cancer (https://www.synapse.org), mRNAseq and Methylation data were retrieved from Firebrowse (http://firebrowse.org/) data portal, which provides multi-tier cancer analysis. The analyses of the overall mutation rates and the mutational patterns of OBSCN gene, as well as their impact on downstream pathways may help us to predict feasible drug targets for breast cancer.

The OBSCN mutations in human cancers using high throughput analysis

Apart from breast cancer, OBSCN gene is widely mutated in many other cancer types as well (Supplementary Figure 1) (www.cbioportal.org). Among the various cancer types breast cancer cases are observed with significant numbers of OBSCN mutations (n = 819) with average mutation frequency of 18%. The overview of this work and study selection are given in the Figure 1. The overall mutations percentage of OBSCN gene in various breast cancer projects are illustrated in Figure 2 (www.cbioportal.org). The large numbers of functional mutations were observed and OBSCN copy number analyses were performed using GISTIC program and many copy gain, amplification and few deletion mutations were observed in major breast cancer projects data (Figure 3). From the overall DNA copy number analysis, we found that OBSCN gene had more number of copy gain and amplification mutations and these variations may potentially affect the giant OBSCURINs protein level and their subsequent expression.
Figure 1

Flow diagram summarizing selection and validation of the present meta-analysis on OBSCN gene

Figure 2

Overall OBSCN gene mutations across various breast cancer projects data of cBioportal

(A) number of OBSCN mutations/copy number variations found in each project; (B) Distribution of OBSCN gene mutations across the patient samples (%).

Figure 3

GISTIC copy number analyses of OBSCN gene in various breast cancer projects found with more number of gain and amplification mutations

Overall OBSCN gene mutations across various breast cancer projects data of cBioportal

(A) number of OBSCN mutations/copy number variations found in each project; (B) Distribution of OBSCN gene mutations across the patient samples (%). The significant copy number alterations are observed and their outcomes are predicted using GISTIC copy number analysis [32]. The overall mutation profiles of OBSCN gene in breast cancer shallow loss, diploid, gain and high level amplifications are classified based on distinctive copy number profiles and their clinical settings [33, 34]. This analysis also revealed a huge number of gain and high level amplification mutations in OBSCN gene found in invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC), followed by invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) and so on. These results indicated that OBSCN gene might play an active role in invasion of cancer cells to distant organs and other metastatic processes. The subsequent mRNA expression analysis was performed using breast cancer patient data and based on the median Log2 value, the OBSCN gene is seen down regulated in majority of the mutated TCGA data. To confirm the OBSCN gene expression we also compared with other well-known breast cancer genes such as TP53, PIK3CA, ARID1A, BRCA1, etc. and found that these genes had closer expression levels and it indicated that OBSCN gene mutations may also have a positive correlation with breast cancer dispositions (Figure 4) (https://cran.r-project.org/); (www.cbioportal.org); (https://cancergenome.nih.gov/). In addition to that, OBSCN methylation profiles were also assessed using breast cancer methylation data by calculating beta value and found OBSCN gene apparently hyper-methylated. Then we compared methylation profiles of OBSCN gene over various cancer types and found the gene is hyper-methylated in breast cancer data, which indicates its methylation may also play an important role in disease etiology. We used promotor methylated and gene expression samples of OBSCN gene from TCGA wanderer (http://maplab.imppc.org/wanderer/). The OBSCN methylation and gene expression was compared with normal (n = 98) and tumor (n = 720) samples at cg09411356 and interestingly, the hyper methylation on OBSCN gene significantly reduced gene expression in tumor than the normal samples. The detailed methylation profile of single probe and its corresponding gene expression and comprehensive comparison of methylation pattern over major cancer types is depicted in Figure 5. (https://xenabrowser.net/#). The downregulation of OBSCN may affect cell-cell adhesion of breast epithelial cells and cells undergo EMT process [12]. Further we analyzed the expression of OBSCN gene in various immunohistochemical breast cancer molecular subtypes. Nearly 73% cases found with luminal A (46.99%) and luminal B (26.05%) type of disease followed by other subtypes including basal (10.7%), Her2(8.9%), normal (3.78%) and claudin-low (3.56%). These molecular subtypes classifications distinctly emphasized, OBSCN is vital gene may involve in the cell proliferation. Moreover, several previous studies on OBSCN gene mutations and its association with other cancers were identified by intensive literature search and the detailed information such as cancer types, mutation profiles, co-mutating genes, amino acid variations and supporting citations are tabulated (Table 1).
Figure 4

Comparative evaluation of OBSCN gene expression pattern with other known breast cancer genes shows OBSCN gene has similar expression pattern with some of the known breast cancer driver genes

Figure 5

(A) OBSCN methylation profiles of normal (n = 98) and breast tumor samples (n = 720) comparison; (B) Gene expression comparison between normal and tumor samples; (C) Comparison of methylation profiles showed that OBSCN gene largely hypermethylated in breast cancer than other cancer types.

Table 1

The OBSCN gene mutations and their associations with various cancer types

Disease TypesMost common co-mutation with OBSCN geneMajor mutations typeSpecific Amino acid variationsReferences
Breast CancerTP53MissenseNA[13, 21, 35]
Lung Cancer; Respiratory DiseaseTP53, ARID1A, PTEN, KRAS, MYC, PIK3CA, BRAF, EGFR, NRASMissenseNA[36, 37]
Gastrointestinal Stromal tumor and LeiomyosarcomaC9orf65, TTN, SPEGMissenseNA[15, 38, 39]
Colorectal cancerTP53MissenseNA[13, 35]
Prostate cancerCLDN7, STRA13, FLNA FAM83H, CLDN7, ARFGAP3, KDM2A,MissenseNA[40, 41]
MelanomaEPHA3, TTNSomatic MissenseE4574K[14]
Cervical/ Endometrial and Ovarian cancerTp53, PIK3CA, FBXW7, NEB, DNAH11, ORAI2, RNF19B, SPTA1, UBA2, UTRN, BSNMissenseNA[42]
Liver & Pancreatic cancerATPAF1, TRPM4, MLL3, ARID1A, ARID1B, ARID2, SOS1, MROH1MissenseNA[14, 19, 43, 44]
GlioblastomaTTNGermline MissenseR4558H[13, 14]
Esophageal CancerC9orf65, TP53, ARID1A, MUC17MissenseNA[45]
SarcomaC9orf65, PRUNE2MissenseNA[15]
Nephroblastoma and other kidney cancersPTHB1MissenseNA[46, 47]
CardiomyopathyTTN, MYH7, DSP, VCL, LAMA4, MYOM1, TNNC1, TNNI3Truncating MutationNA[4751]
(A) OBSCN methylation profiles of normal (n = 98) and breast tumor samples (n = 720) comparison; (B) Gene expression comparison between normal and tumor samples; (C) Comparison of methylation profiles showed that OBSCN gene largely hypermethylated in breast cancer than other cancer types.

Functional analysis of differentially expressed OBSCN gene in breast cancer

Mutations in the OBSCN gene largely affect various interlinked proteins involved in cell adhesion and integration process [52]. Functional mutations in OBSCN largely affects E-cadherin, α-catenin and β-catenin expressions which initiate epithelial cells dispersions and subsequently increase the level of F-actin followed by cell migration [20, 53–55]. Actin filaments are vital for cellular mechanistic amoeboid movements accelerated by filapodia or pseudopodia like structures formed in cytoplasmic regions [56, 57]. A recent study showed that OBSCN functional gene mutations are responsible for the loss of vital protein expressions [21]. The loss of OBSCN appears to be consequent event in primary to metastatic breast cancer majorly affecting cellular integration. The protein kinases (PKs) are from the larger protein family involved in various cellular, structural and functional mechanisms in humans. The Serine/Threonine Kinase (STK) is one of the important protein kinase involved in cellular cytoskeletal and integration roles such as cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptotic process, etc. [58, 59]. The STK actively binds with p120-catenin and regulates cadherin facilitated intercellular adhesions and E-cadherin-p120 bound complex also plays a crucial role in maintaining the equilibrium of cadherin levels [60, 61]. The OBSCN mutations affect E-cadherin level, lead to flux in adherens junctions and increase cell disintegration followed by cell movement [62]. The OBSCN gene mutations heavily affect STK protein activity and also act as a ligand for small ankyrin1 (sANK1). sANK1 are integral proteins to the fundamental spectrin-actin cytoskeleton involved in cellular movement activation and proliferation, which cause metastasis [63]. Moreover, OBSCN gene also acts as a kinome regulatory element that regulates few other kinase family proteins in either direct or indirect manner.

Gene interaction analysis revealed that OBSCN gene is positively correlated with protein binding and cell transition associated genes

The OBSCN gene mutations have significant relationship with genes responsible for cellular structural and functional roles. Also, the expression of OBSCN gene is positively correlated with few other genes such as TOP1MT, MYC, TARPBP1, ADCK3, TRIM17, and RND2. Initially we used metastatic breast cancer data (Metastatic Breast cancer-France 2016) for network analysis and revealed many participating genes such as RHOT2, RAC3, RHOD, ARHGEF7, PAK1, PDPK1, AKT3, RIPK2, ERBB2, PRKD1, etc. which are positively correlated with amplification mutations and have strong association with cell proliferation, differentiation, tumorigenesis and other metastasis features. Similarly, we used British Columbia Xenografts (British Columbia, Nature 2014) data linked with many interesting genes such as RHOB, ITSN1, RHOD, ERBB2, AKT3, BRAF, CDK1, MASTL along with eight more genes which were highly correlated with cell signaling and cell migration functions. The breast invasive carcinoma (TCGA, Provisional) data showed that the OBSCN had strong interaction with PAK1 gene through RHOU and RAC3 genes. The breast cancer oncogene, PAK1, acts as a hub gene connecting two sub networks. In first sub network, PDPK1 gene a central gene linked with other significant genes such as AKT3, ERBB2, SGK3, PRKCB, PRKCQ, etc. and the second sub network is connected with STK3, AURKA, CSNK1D, NEK2, etc. The PAK1 and PDPK1 genes are strongly associated with breast tumorigenesis and cell migration in metastatic event [64, 65]. Along with the afore-mentioned genes, OBSCN is interconnected with other genes such as PAK2, AKT1, TP53RK, NEK2, WNK1, CSNK1D, etc. which are frequently mutated in invasive breast carcinoma (Nature 2012) (Cell 2015). The detailed OBSCN mutation specific network neighbors were identified using functional protein association network using STRING (http://string-db.org/). Additional pathway specific networks were also used to identify and validate the genes involved in OBSCN associated pathway using PCViz (http://www.pathwaycommons.org/) and detailed networks are illustrated in Figure 6.
Figure 6

(A) Mutation specific OBSCN functional association network and its interacting network partners identified using STRING database; (B) Gene specific interactions pathways were identified using pathway commons network visualizer and many interacting partners of OBSCN are cancer-associated genes.

(A) Mutation specific OBSCN functional association network and its interacting network partners identified using STRING database; (B) Gene specific interactions pathways were identified using pathway commons network visualizer and many interacting partners of OBSCN are cancer-associated genes.

OBSCN genetic alterations lead to cell survival and switches towards EMT

Substantial evidences propose that OBSCN functional mutations may have strong associations with Wnt signaling regulated by a series of activators along with β-catenin [66]. In the nucleus, β-catenin binds to transcription activation elements (TCF/LEF), leading to the activation of the target genes (specifically CCND1, c-MYC, and FN1) responsible for the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation [67-69]. Mutational event of OBSCN gene majorly affects β-catenin downstream signaling leading to lower down or over expression of genes such as CCND1, c-MYC, and FN1, which stimulates several types of cancers including breast, ovarian, lung, pancreatic, colorectal, and uterine carcinoma [70-75]. The elevated level of fibronectin or loss of proteins such as E-CADHERIN, Β-CATENIN, etc. may cause cellular proliferation followed by EMT, which render patients overall survival. Henceforth, OBSCN gene is believed to be an indirect regulator of fibronectin expression in breast and colon cancer [72, 76]. The fibronectin malfunction may also affect vital proteins such as integrin and other transmembrane receptors responsible for cell-cell contact, extracellular matrix (ECM) communications, cell adhesion and accommodate several ligands such as collagen, laminin and vitronectin. Fibronectin is important protein which activates integrin and is involved in the regulation of cellular signal transduction, cell proliferation, gene expression and cytoskeletal reorganization [77]. Hence, the OBSCN gene mutation perhaps affects the regulation of β-catenin and other regulatory elements in Wnt signaling pathway largely affects mainly the downstream genes and proteins expressions involved [78]. Interestingly in metastatic cancer, OBSCN mutation observed with new list of interacting genes in Ras protein family members such as RHOD, RHOT2 and RAC3 are involved in major functions such as reorganization of actin cytoskeleton, GTPase activity, formation of lamellipodia, respectively [79–81, 99]. The RAC3 gene is important gene activates PAK1, which is vital to stimulates F-actin formation leads to cell migration. Similarly, PAK1 activates another important proliferation related protein, aurora kinase (AURKA) and it inhibits IKB-α, which inhibits apoptosis through NF-ĸB and CIAP1 genes [82, 83]. The detailed OBSCN gene involved cancer-associated pathway illustrated in Figure 7. The Panther database (http://pantherdb.org/) was used to further validate gene ontology based molecular functions analysis and further confirmed by evaluating fold enrichment scores [84]. The OBSCN gene and their networks neighbors were involved in binding and cell regulatory mechanisms including cell adhesion and binding with several receptors and signaling molecules (Figure 8).
Figure 7

The OBSCN gene involved either direct or indirect pathway of GPCR, Ras, p75 or Wnt signaling

(In GPCR pathway, OBSCN-RhoGEF is simultaneously regulates mDIA, Rho and their downstream genes which are involved in cell differentiation and lamellipodia formation; the other chain of OBSCN, MLCK and its downstream pathway activates MLC leads to formation of stress fiber which cause cell differentiation and survival; On the other way RhoA activated from p75 (NTR) pathway also involved in Ras pathway regulates down regulates MLCK; in Wnt signaling OBSCN disequilibrium leads to β-catenin loss which leads to carcinogenesis.

Figure 8

Molecular functional classification analysis of OBSCN gene and its network neighbor genes showed that OBSCN gene majorly involved in binding activity with various molecules

The OBSCN gene involved either direct or indirect pathway of GPCR, Ras, p75 or Wnt signaling

(In GPCR pathway, OBSCN-RhoGEF is simultaneously regulates mDIA, Rho and their downstream genes which are involved in cell differentiation and lamellipodia formation; the other chain of OBSCN, MLCK and its downstream pathway activates MLC leads to formation of stress fiber which cause cell differentiation and survival; On the other way RhoA activated from p75 (NTR) pathway also involved in Ras pathway regulates down regulates MLCK; in Wnt signaling OBSCN disequilibrium leads to β-catenin loss which leads to carcinogenesis.

Mutational tolerance profiles and their consequences in proteome level

Recent studies on OBSCN mutations uncover key amino acids mutations, which are crucial factor for many human diseases including cardiomyopathy and cancers. [49, 51, 85]. In this study, we also attempted to know the deep impact of OBSCN mutations including the proteome level. The OBSCN gene mutational protein variants retrieved from Ensembl genome browser (http://asia.ensembl.org/) and their effects were predicted using Variant Effect Predictor (VEP) tool (http://asia.ensembl.org/Tools/VEP) and wANNOVAR (http://wannovar.wglab.org/) [86, 87]. The SIFT (http://sift.jcvi.org/) and PolyPhen-2 (http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/) tools were used to achieve the most reliable protein variants prediction, and we also considered few other variants impact prediction algorithms such as Log ratio test (LRT), Mutation Taster (http://www.mutationtaster.org/), Mutation Assessor (http://mutationassessor.org/r3/), FATHMM (http://fathmm.biocompute.org.uk/) and Variant effect scoring tool 3 (VEST3)(http://karchinlab.org/apps/appVest.html), etc. Most of the abovementioned tools predict the variants and their impacts based on sequence changes and very few tools also consider structural changes [88-96]. The variants predicted by the maximum number of tools were used to filter and used for further analysis (Figure 9) (http://compbio.berkeley.edu/proj/varant/manual.html). From the overall analysis, it was seen that OBSCN gene had a low tolerance against few functional mutations (total of 251 protein variants), half of the variants (~48%) exhibited deleterious and probably damaging effects (Supplementary Table 1), and rest of the variants came in deleterious & possibly damaging and deleterious with benign categories [95, 97, 98]. The overlapping mutational impact variants were taken and further analyzed the somatic mutations using COSMIC database. The detailed OBSCN mutational impact on protein levels are emphasized using lollipop plot of maftools (Bioconductor R-package) and amino acids variations and their impacts are indicated in various colors representations along with mutations count (Figure 10) (https://github.com/PoisonAlien/mafTools). In addition, the key mutational variants, types, amino acid variations and impacts in domain levels are listed in Table 2.
Figure 9

(A) SIFT and POLYPHEN-2 programs were used to predict the most common and significant OBSCN mutational impact variants; (B) To validate the high-impact variants and their mutations impact are predicted using 10 potential impact prediction tools.

Figure 10

Lollipop plot function of maftools represents functional amino acids mutations and their impacts on various domains of OBSCN gene are indicated in different colors representation

Table 2

The significant OBSCN mutation variants and their impacts filtered from cBioPortal breast cancer patient tumor samples

Genomic CoordinateReference and VariantsMutation TypeCopy NumberAmino acid VariantMajor Domain Affected
228402602C>GMissenseAMPT544SFibronectin-III
228412169NAMissenseGainV888GIg-Domain
228432150T>GMissenseGainV1212GIg-Domain
228432150NAMissenseGainV1120GIg-Domain
228432244G>TMissenseGainQ1243HIg-Domain
228434340C>TMissenseDiploidT1382MIg-Domain
228461665G>AMissenseGainV1778MFibronectin-III
228464221G>-Frameshift DELDelV2282fsIg-Domain
228464225->GFrameshift INSGainQ2283fsIg-Domain
228479785NAMissenseGainG3509VIg-Domain
228479785G>TMissenseGainG3938VIg-Domain
228479785G>TMissenseGainG3693VIg-Domain
228480325T>CMissenseGainW3998RIg-Domain
228480325T>CMissenseGainW3753RIg-Domain
228480325NAMissenseGainW3569RIg-Domain
228481236C>TMissenseGainR3868CIg-Domain
228491624AC>-Frameshift DELDelL4419fsIg-Domain
228492905G>CMissenseGainS4538TIg-Domain
228494273G>AMissenseGainE4911KIg-Domain
228494273NAMissenseGainE3954KIg-Domain
228494979NAMissenseAMPK4071NIg-Domain
228497221G>AMissenseGainV5282MIg-Domain
228497221NAMissenseGainV4325MIg-Domain
228497221G>AMissenseGainV5037MIg-Domain
228503574G>AMissenseGainE5059QIg-Domain
228506585T>CMissenseGainV5668ASH3
228506585NAMissenseGainV4711AIg-Domain
228506585T>CMissenseGainV5423AIg-Domain
228506947G>AMissenseGainA5544TNA
228509882G>AMissenseGainE5826KNA
228521392NAMissenseGainS5322CIg-Domain
228521466C>TMissenseGainR6304WNA
228521466NAMissenseGainR5347WIg-Domain
228521466C>TMissenseGainR6059WIg-Domain
228537694->TFrameshift INSGainY6796fsNA
228538601C>TNonsenseGainQ6838*Ig-Domain
228547542G>AMissenseGainG6317RNA
228556454G>TMissenseGainR7312LSTK-cat Domain
228559643C>AMissenseGainP7767QNA
228559663C>TMissenseGainP7774SProtein Kinase 2

*Ig- Immunoglobulin. AMP-Amplification; Del-Deletion

(A) SIFT and POLYPHEN-2 programs were used to predict the most common and significant OBSCN mutational impact variants; (B) To validate the high-impact variants and their mutations impact are predicted using 10 potential impact prediction tools. *Ig- Immunoglobulin. AMP-Amplification; Del-Deletion

OBSCN mediated targeted anti-cancer therapy: a present and future perspectives

Several interesting genes are interlinked with tumorigenesis including OBSCN gene, which is considered the key gene among them. The OBSCN gene may act as unique target for anti-cancer therapy in breast and other cancers, since it is having multiple interactions with intra and inter-cellular levels of numerous interconnecting proteins. In breast cancer targeted anti-cancer therapy, several key genes are targeted such as CTNND1, CDC42 and DVL. Over expression of P120-CATENIN tremendously inhibited several signaling molecules such as RHOA, RAC1 and CDC42 which are involved in the regulation of numerous cellular functions [100]. Similarly, downregulation of CDC42 initiated cancer. Interestingly OBSCN gene is an active target regulating CDC42 downstream pathway accounting for the tumorigenesis [101]. DVL (Dishevelled homology1) protein phosphorylation are vital phenomenon accelerated by CK1ε and RIPK4 in Wnt signaling pathway [102]. Hence, reduced β-catenin level and LRP6 association facilitates further downstream signaling of β-catenin, which activates transcription factors/ lymphoid enhancer-binding factors (TCF/LEF) involved in numerous cellular regulations and cell migrations. An alternative and most interesting target is DVL expression responsible for calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CamK-II) activation followed by expression of F-actin. The F-actin is the key protein involved in cell division, contraction and locomotion and altered F-actin dynamics is most vital feature for epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) of metastatic breast cancer. Hence, anti-cancer drug targets may actively repress DVL and it may potentially block F-actin dynamics, which inhibits EMT process in cancer cells, and the overall phenomena, is indirectly regulated by OBSCN gene.

Concluding remarks

We have analyzed OBSCN gene mutation, expression and methylation data and the data revealed that OBSCN gene is one of most frequently mutated gene in various cancer types, especially in breast cancer. The OBSCN gene mutation may play an essential role during cancer initiation and progression, largely distressed by various kinds of mutations in gene level due to loss of heterozygosity, various oncogenic factors, intra and intercellular environmental stress. Mutations in OBSCN gene largely affects multiple properties of cells including cell adhesion and increase the integration and render cellular transitions and many more. Evaluation of OBSCN mutational status may help early prognosis of metastatic potential of breast cancer. Mutational, copy number and epigenetic analysis of OBSCN gene status may serve as a tool for the prediction of targeted anti-cancer drugs, which will be helpful for targeted breast cancer therapy [11, 20]. Further functional studies on OBSCN gene in various model systems with gene overexpression and/or targeted disruption should also greatly facilitate these processes.
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Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2014-11-10       Impact factor: 9.867

5.  Patterns of somatic mutation in human cancer genomes.

Authors:  Christopher Greenman; Philip Stephens; Raffaella Smith; Gillian L Dalgliesh; Christopher Hunter; Graham Bignell; Helen Davies; Jon Teague; Adam Butler; Claire Stevens; Sarah Edkins; Sarah O'Meara; Imre Vastrik; Esther E Schmidt; Tim Avis; Syd Barthorpe; Gurpreet Bhamra; Gemma Buck; Bhudipa Choudhury; Jody Clements; Jennifer Cole; Ed Dicks; Simon Forbes; Kris Gray; Kelly Halliday; Rachel Harrison; Katy Hills; Jon Hinton; Andy Jenkinson; David Jones; Andy Menzies; Tatiana Mironenko; Janet Perry; Keiran Raine; Dave Richardson; Rebecca Shepherd; Alexandra Small; Calli Tofts; Jennifer Varian; Tony Webb; Sofie West; Sara Widaa; Andy Yates; Daniel P Cahill; David N Louis; Peter Goldstraw; Andrew G Nicholson; Francis Brasseur; Leendert Looijenga; Barbara L Weber; Yoke-Eng Chiew; Anna DeFazio; Mel F Greaves; Anthony R Green; Peter Campbell; Ewan Birney; Douglas F Easton; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Min-Han Tan; Sok Kean Khoo; Bin Tean Teh; Siu Tsan Yuen; Suet Yi Leung; Richard Wooster; P Andrew Futreal; Michael R Stratton
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2007-03-08       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 6.  Filopodia in cell adhesion, 3D migration and cancer cell invasion.

Authors:  Guillaume Jacquemet; Hellyeh Hamidi; Johanna Ivaska
Journal:  Curr Opin Cell Biol       Date:  2015-07-14       Impact factor: 8.382

7.  A novel role for p120 catenin in E-cadherin function.

Authors:  Renee C Ireton; Michael A Davis; Jolanda van Hengel; Deborah J Mariner; Kirk Barnes; Molly A Thoreson; Panos Z Anastasiadis; Linsey Matrisian; Linda M Bundy; Linda Sealy; Barbara Gilbert; Frans van Roy; Albert B Reynolds
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  2002-11-11       Impact factor: 10.539

8.  Systematic identification of cancer driving signaling pathways based on mutual exclusivity of genomic alterations.

Authors:  Özgün Babur; Mithat Gönen; Bülent Arman Aksoy; Nikolaus Schultz; Giovanni Ciriello; Chris Sander; Emek Demir
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2015-02-26       Impact factor: 13.583

9.  Identifying Mendelian disease genes with the variant effect scoring tool.

Authors:  Hannah Carter; Christopher Douville; Peter D Stenson; David N Cooper; Rachel Karchin
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2013-05-28       Impact factor: 3.969

10.  OBSCN Mutations Associated with Dilated Cardiomyopathy and Haploinsufficiency.

Authors:  Steven Marston; Cecile Montgiraud; Alex B Munster; O'Neal Copeland; Onjee Choi; Cristobal Dos Remedios; Andrew E Messer; Elisabeth Ehler; Ralph Knöll
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-09-25       Impact factor: 3.240

View more
  9 in total

1.  p27 inhibits CDK6/CCND1 complex formation resulting in cell cycle arrest and inhibition of cell proliferation.

Authors:  Niannian Li; Jie Zeng; Fuze Sun; Xiaoling Tong; Gang Meng; Chunman Wu; Xin Ding; Lanlan Liu; Minjin Han; Cheng Lu; Fangyin Dai
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2018-10-24       Impact factor: 4.534

2.  Giant obscurin regulates migration and metastasis via RhoA-dependent cytoskeletal remodeling in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Soontorn Tuntithavornwat; Daniel J Shea; Bin Sheng Wong; Talia Guardia; Se Jong Lee; Christopher L Yankaskas; Lei Zheng; Aikaterini Kontrogianni-Konstantopoulos; Konstantinos Konstantopoulos
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2021-11-23       Impact factor: 9.756

Review 3.  Obscurin: A multitasking giant in the fight against cancer.

Authors:  Talia Guardia; Matthew Eason; Aikaterini Kontrogianni-Konstantopoulos
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta Rev Cancer       Date:  2021-05-18       Impact factor: 11.414

4.  Discovering mutated driver genes through a robust and sparse co-regularized matrix factorization framework with prior information from mRNA expression patterns and interaction network.

Authors:  Jianing Xi; Minghui Wang; Ao Li
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2018-06-05       Impact factor: 3.169

5.  Genomic profiling of colorectal cancer with isolated lung metastasis.

Authors:  Nan Zhang; Jiabo Di; Zaozao Wang; Pin Gao; Beihai Jiang; Xiangqian Su
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2020-07-01       Impact factor: 5.722

Review 6.  The M-band: The underestimated part of the sarcomere.

Authors:  Stephan Lange; Nikos Pinotsis; Irina Agarkova; Elisabeth Ehler
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Res       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 4.739

7.  Genome-wide expression of the residual lung reacting to experimental Pneumonectomy.

Authors:  Valerio Napolioni; Fortunato Bianconi; Rossella Potenza; Francesco M Carpi; Vienna Ludovini; Matteo Picciolini; Francesca R Tofanetti; Antonello Bufalari; Stefano Pallotti; Camilla Poggi; Marco Anile; Niccolò Daddi; Federico Venuta; Francesco Puma; Jacopo Vannucci
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-12-06       Impact factor: 3.969

8.  Genomic characterization of Chinese ovarian clear cell carcinoma identifies driver genes by whole exome sequencing.

Authors:  Qin Yang; Cancan Zhang; Yuan Ren; Huan Yi; Tianjiao Luo; Fangliang Xing; Xuefeng Bai; Lining Cui; Linyan Zhu; Jun Ouyang; Pengcheng Jiang; Weirong Fan; Jianping Qiu; Fengmian Wang; Xin Xing; Zhigang Zhang; Xueli Zhang; Rong Zhang
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2020-07-07       Impact factor: 5.715

9.  Pan-Cancer Analysis of Human Kinome Gene Expression and Promoter DNA Methylation Identifies Dark Kinase Biomarkers in Multiple Cancers.

Authors:  Siddesh Southekal; Nitish Kumar Mishra; Chittibabu Guda
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 6.639

  9 in total

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