Abstract
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common hematologic malignancy, however, specific tumor-associated genes and signaling pathways are yet to be deciphered. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were computed based on gene expression profiles from GSE32018, GSE56315, and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) DLBC. Overlapping DEGs were then evaluated for gene ontology (GO), pathways enrichment, DNA methylation, protein–protein interaction (PPI) network analysis as well as survival analysis. Seventy-four up-regulated and 79 down-regulated DEGs were identified. From PPI network analysis, majority of the DEGs were involved in cell cycle, oocyte meiosis, and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) pathways. Six hub genes including CDC20, MELK, PBK, prostaglandin D2 synthase (PTGDS), PCNA, and CDK1 were selected using the Molecular Complex Detection (MCODE). CDC20 and PTGDS were able to predict overall survival (OS) in TCGA DLBC and in an additional independent cohort GSE31312. Furthermore, CDC20 DNA methylation negatively regulated CDC20 expression and was able to predict OS in DLBCL. A two-gene panel consisting of CDC20 and PTGDS had a better prognostic value compared with CDC20 or PTGDS alone in the TCGA cohort (P=0.026 and 0.039). Overall, the present study identified a set of novel genes and pathways that may play a significant role in the initiation and progression of DLBCL. In addition, CDC20 and PTGDS will provide useful guidance for therapeutic applications.
Introduction
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the most frequently diagnosed subtype of hematological cancers, is a molecular heterogeneous disease with an annual incidence rate of over 100000 cases worldwide [1,2]. Although DLBCL is a curable lymphoma [3,4], up to 40% of patients succumb to this cancer, thus indicating the pathology and mechanism of DLBCL remains ambiguous. Deciphering the genes and signaling pathways modulated during tumorigenesis will help guide therapeutic efficacy.
High-throughput sequencing including gene-chip and next-generation sequencing (NGS) is a rapid and efficient method to obtain differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between tumor and normal tissues [3,4]. At present, the high-throughput data of various genomic alterations in various cancers have been generated and archived in public databases. Recent studies have identified hundreds of DEGs in DLBCL [5]. However, the results of these studies have contradictory or inconsistent data due to small sample size [6], tissue heterogeneity or produced from single cohort studies [7]. Integrating and re-analyzing published sequence data may help resolve these issues. Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) are two available public databases that provide the opportunity to investigate new research based on gene sequencing data mining with large-scale clinical samples from multiple cohorts.
In the current study, we initially identified 153 overlapping DEGs from GSE32018 [8], GSE56315 [9] and TCGA DLBC datasets. Gene ontology (GO) and pathways enrichment, as well as protein–protein interaction (PPI) network of these DEGs were performed. Based on Molecular Complex Detection (MCODE) algorithm, hub genes were selected and their prognostic role was evaluated based on TCGA DLBC. In addition, we successfully validated the prognostic signature of these hub genes using an independent cohort from GSE31312 [10]. We also constructed a two-gene combined panel and confirmed this model as a more sensitive predictive tool.
Materials and methods
Gene expression profile datasets and DEGs identification
The DLBCL and noncancerous tissues gene expression profile datasets GSE32018 and GSE56315 were obtained from NCBI-GEO (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/). GEO datasets platforms were GPL570 (Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0 Array, Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA, U.S.A.) for GSE56315 and GPL6480 and (Agilent-014850 Whole Human Genome Microarray 4x44K G4112F, Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, U.S.A.) for GSE32018. GSE56315 dataset included 89 DLBCL tissues and 33 normal tonsil tissues. As for the GSE32018 dataset, 22 DLBCL tissues and 7 normal lymph nodes were profiled. High-throughput data of RNA-Seq for patients diagnosed with DLBCL were downloaded from TCGA (https://tcga-data.nci.nih.gov/tcga/). RNA-Seq data from Illumina HiSeq RNASeq platform comprised 48 DLBCL tissues.
The R language package DESeq was used for determining DEGs between DLBCL samples and noncancerous tissues (adjusted P<0.01 and [logFC] > 1 as the cut-off criterion), respectively. The FunRich [11] software was used for analysis of DEGs that overlapped between the two GEO datasets.
GO and pathway enrichment analysis
Candidate DEGs function and pathway enrichment were analyzed using the Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID, version 6.7, https://david.ncifcrf.gov/) and FUNRICH Software. P<0.05 was defined as the cutoff for significant function and pathway analysis.
Integration of PPI network, hub genes, and significant pathway identification
The Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes (STRING) database (version 10.0, http://string-db.org) was used to predict candidate DEG-encoded PPI. Afterward, Cytoscape software (version 3.4.0, http://www.cytoscape.org/) was used to construct the PPI network. In addition, MCODE was used to analyze PPI network modules [12]. DAVID and FUNRICH were used to perform pathway enrichment analysis of gene modules. At last, hub genes were identified using the MCODE plug-in, and was used to calculate node degree, i.e. the number of interconnections to filter hub genes of PPI.
Validation of the diagnostic effectiveness of the identified hub genes for DLBCL
The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was used to assess the diagnostic effectiveness of the identified hub genes between DLBCL and normal tissue, and was based on the GSE56315 dataset.
Bioinformatics analysis of the association between hub gene expression and overall survival in patients with DLBCL
The association between the identified hub gene expression and overall survival (OS) for DLBCL patients was assessed using data from TCGA DLBC and GSE3131. Data for hub gene expression and OS from TCGA DLBC were downloaded from the UCSC Xena browser (https://xenabrowser.net). Forty patients with complete clinical stage and OS data were selected and analyzed using SPSS 20. (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, U.S.A.) and P-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant. The R2 web-based application (http://r2.amc.nl) was used to generate Kaplan–Meier survival curves from data in GSE31312. The optimal cutoff was selected by scan model. Kaplan–Meier curves for OS were generated using the auto-select best cutoff.
In addition, the prognostic potential of the two-gene panel was determined by combining CDC20 and prostaglandin D2 synthase (PTGDS) and compared with CDC20 or PTGDS alone using ROC analysis. All statistical analyses were performed using SPSS 20 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, U.S.A.). P-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
Bioinformatics analysis of the association between CDC20 and PTGDS methylation and OS in DLBCL patients
RNA-seq and Illumina 450 K methylation array datasets were downloaded using the UCSC Xena browser for TCGA DLBC. The CDC20 and PTGDS mRNA expression and their DNA methylation levels were obtained by data mining the TCGA DLBC. The association between CDC20 and PTGDS mRNA expression, CDC20 and PTGDS methylation status and OS in DLBCL patients were analyzed using SPSS 20 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, U.S.A.) and P-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
Results
Identification of overlapping DEGs in DLBCL
Based on the cut-off criteria of P<0.01 and [logFC] > 1 for selecting DEGs, a total of 295 and 3017 up-regulated DEGs, 387 and 6613 down-regulated DEGs were identified from GSE32018 and GSE56315, respectively (Figure 1A,B). As shown in Figure 1C, 74 up-regulated genes and 79 down-regulated genes overlapped between the two datasets.
Volcano plots and Venn diagram for microarray data on DEGs between DLBCL and noncancerous tissues
Functional enrichment analysis of DEGs in DLBCL
As shown in Figure 2A and Table 1, GO enriched functions for the 74 overlapped up-regulated genes and 79 overlapped down-regulated genes were involved in a number of biological processes (BP), including cell cycle phase, M phase, mitotic cell cycle, cell cycle process, and cell division for the up-regulated genes, and muscle system process, purine nucleotide metabolic process, negative regulation of cell proliferation, regulation of RNA metabolic process, and transcription for the down-regulated genes. With regard to molecular function (MF), the top six MFs of the up-regulated DEGs were microtubule motor activity, ATP binding, adenyl ribonucleotide binding, purine nucleoside binding, nucleoside binding, and ribonucleotide binding, and the top four MFs of the down-regulated DEGs were transcription factor activity, DNA binding, transcription regulator activity, and cAMP binding (Figure 2B and Table 1). For the cellular component (CC) terms, majority of the up-regulated DEGs were enriched for spindle, microtubule cytoskeleton, condensed chromosome, kinetochore, cytoskeletal part, cytosol, cytoskeleton, and microtubule. For the majority of the down-regulated genes were enriched for ‘intrinsic to membrane’ and ‘integral to membrane’ (Figure 2C and Table 1). Furthermore, the up-regulated genes were largely enriched for cell cycle, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, oocyte meiosis, cell cycle mitotic, cell cycle checkpoints, APC-Cdc20-mediated degradation of Nek2A and cdc20: p-APC/C-mediated degradation of cyclin A pathways. The down-regulated genes were significantly enriched for epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) pathway (Figure 2D and Table 2).
Significantly enriched GO and pathway terms of the DEGs in DLBCL
Term . | Description . | Count . | P-value . |
---|---|---|---|
Up-regulated | |||
GO:0022403 | Cell cycle phase | 21 | 2.69E-15 |
GO:0000279 | M phase | 19 | 9.84E-15 |
GO:0000278 | Mitotic cell cycle | 19 | 7.50E-14 |
GO:0022402 | Cell cycle process | 22 | 8.22E-14 |
GO:0003777 | Microtubule motor activity | 5 | 3.33E-04 |
GO:0005524 | ATP binding | 17 | 3.58E-04 |
GO:0032559 | Adenyl ribonucleotide binding | 17 | 4.17E-04 |
GO:0001883 | Purine nucleoside binding | 17 | 8.80E-04 |
GO:0001882 | Nucleoside binding | 17 | 9.49E-04 |
GO:0005819 | Spindle | 14 | 2.04E-14 |
GO:0015630 | Microtubule cytoskeleton | 16 | 3.56E-09 |
GO:0000793 | Condensed chromosome | 9 | 5.24E-08 |
GO:0044430 | Cytoskeletal part | 17 | 8.49E-07 |
GO:0000776 | Kinetochore | 7 | 7.19E-07 |
GO:0005874 | Microtubule | 8 | 1.28E-04 |
Down-regulated | |||
GO:0006163 | Purine nucleotide metabolic process | 4 | 0.023786 |
GO:0008285 | Negative regulation of cell proliferation | 5 | 0.031481 |
GO:0051252 | Regulation of RNA metabolic process | 12 | 0.032176 |
GO:0006350 | Transcription | 13 | 0.038040 |
GO:0003700 | Transcription factor activity | 9 | 0.022489 |
GO:0003677 | DNA binding | 15 | 0.032567 |
GO:0030528 | Transcription regulator activity | 11 | 0.041292 |
Term . | Description . | Count . | P-value . |
---|---|---|---|
Up-regulated | |||
GO:0022403 | Cell cycle phase | 21 | 2.69E-15 |
GO:0000279 | M phase | 19 | 9.84E-15 |
GO:0000278 | Mitotic cell cycle | 19 | 7.50E-14 |
GO:0022402 | Cell cycle process | 22 | 8.22E-14 |
GO:0003777 | Microtubule motor activity | 5 | 3.33E-04 |
GO:0005524 | ATP binding | 17 | 3.58E-04 |
GO:0032559 | Adenyl ribonucleotide binding | 17 | 4.17E-04 |
GO:0001883 | Purine nucleoside binding | 17 | 8.80E-04 |
GO:0001882 | Nucleoside binding | 17 | 9.49E-04 |
GO:0005819 | Spindle | 14 | 2.04E-14 |
GO:0015630 | Microtubule cytoskeleton | 16 | 3.56E-09 |
GO:0000793 | Condensed chromosome | 9 | 5.24E-08 |
GO:0044430 | Cytoskeletal part | 17 | 8.49E-07 |
GO:0000776 | Kinetochore | 7 | 7.19E-07 |
GO:0005874 | Microtubule | 8 | 1.28E-04 |
Down-regulated | |||
GO:0006163 | Purine nucleotide metabolic process | 4 | 0.023786 |
GO:0008285 | Negative regulation of cell proliferation | 5 | 0.031481 |
GO:0051252 | Regulation of RNA metabolic process | 12 | 0.032176 |
GO:0006350 | Transcription | 13 | 0.038040 |
GO:0003700 | Transcription factor activity | 9 | 0.022489 |
GO:0003677 | DNA binding | 15 | 0.032567 |
GO:0030528 | Transcription regulator activity | 11 | 0.041292 |
Pathway . | Name . | Gene count . | P-value . | Genes . |
---|---|---|---|---|
Up-regulated DEG | ||||
REACTOME: REACT_152 | Cell cycle, mitotic | 16 | 5.20E-08 | GINS1, KIF23, CDK1, SGOL2, DBF4, NUF2, CDC20, MCM10, KIF2C, CDCA8, MAD2L1, ZWINT, RRM2, PCNA, BUB1B, SKA1 |
KEGG: hsa04110 | Cell cycle | 7 | 2.36E-05 | CDK1, MAD2L1, DBF4, PCNA, BUB1B, TTK, CDC20 |
REACTOME: REACT_1538 | Cell cycle checkpoints | 6 | 0.004610 | CDK1, MAD2L1, DBF4, BUB1B, CDC20, MCM10 |
KEGG: hsa04114 | Oocyte meiosis | 3 | 0.010084 | CDK1, MAD2L1, CDC20 |
REACTOME: REACT_8017 | APC-Cdc20-mediated degradation of Nek2A | 3 | 0.021560 | MAD2L1, BUB1B, CDC20 |
REACTOME: REACT_6850 | Cdc20:p-APC/C-mediated degradation of Cyclin A | 4 | 0.027276 | CDK1, MAD2L1, BUB1B, CDC20 |
KEGG: hsa00010 | Glycolysis/gluconeogenesis | 3 | 0.034518 | LDHA, PGAM1, GAPDH |
Down-regulated DEG | ||||
FUNRICH biological pathway | EMT | 4 | 0.007158 | PTGDS, FCER2, TPO, IL11RA |
Pathway . | Name . | Gene count . | P-value . | Genes . |
---|---|---|---|---|
Up-regulated DEG | ||||
REACTOME: REACT_152 | Cell cycle, mitotic | 16 | 5.20E-08 | GINS1, KIF23, CDK1, SGOL2, DBF4, NUF2, CDC20, MCM10, KIF2C, CDCA8, MAD2L1, ZWINT, RRM2, PCNA, BUB1B, SKA1 |
KEGG: hsa04110 | Cell cycle | 7 | 2.36E-05 | CDK1, MAD2L1, DBF4, PCNA, BUB1B, TTK, CDC20 |
REACTOME: REACT_1538 | Cell cycle checkpoints | 6 | 0.004610 | CDK1, MAD2L1, DBF4, BUB1B, CDC20, MCM10 |
KEGG: hsa04114 | Oocyte meiosis | 3 | 0.010084 | CDK1, MAD2L1, CDC20 |
REACTOME: REACT_8017 | APC-Cdc20-mediated degradation of Nek2A | 3 | 0.021560 | MAD2L1, BUB1B, CDC20 |
REACTOME: REACT_6850 | Cdc20:p-APC/C-mediated degradation of Cyclin A | 4 | 0.027276 | CDK1, MAD2L1, BUB1B, CDC20 |
KEGG: hsa00010 | Glycolysis/gluconeogenesis | 3 | 0.034518 | LDHA, PGAM1, GAPDH |
Down-regulated DEG | ||||
FUNRICH biological pathway | EMT | 4 | 0.007158 | PTGDS, FCER2, TPO, IL11RA |
Hub genes and pathway identification with PPI network and modular analysis
Using the STRING online database and Cytoscape software, a total of 120 DEGs (69 up-regulated and 51 down-regulated DEGs) of the 153 commonly altered DEGs were filtered into the DEGs PPI network, and contained 120 nodes and 1226 edges (Figure 3A). Thirty-three of the 153 DEGs did not fall into the DEGs PPI network. The entire PPI network was analyzed using MCODE, afterward, the most significant module was selected (Figure 3B). Pathway enrichment analysis showed that the most significant module consisted of 37 nodes and 651 edges (Figure 3B), and were mainly associated with cell cycle, oocyte meiosis, and EMT (Figure 3C and Table 3). The six most significant nodes from MCODE were CDC20, MELK, PBK, PTGDS, PCNA, and CDK1, and were identified as hub genes. All hub genes were up-regulated, except PTGDS.
DEGs PPI network complex and modular analysis
Term . | Description . | Count . | P-value . |
---|---|---|---|
KEGG cfa04110 | Cell cycle | 7 | 5.36E-09 |
FUNRICH biological pathway | EMT | 5 | 0.007158 |
KEGG cfa04114 | Oocyte meiosis | 3 | 0.012116 |
Term . | Description . | Count . | P-value . |
---|---|---|---|
KEGG cfa04110 | Cell cycle | 7 | 5.36E-09 |
FUNRICH biological pathway | EMT | 5 | 0.007158 |
KEGG cfa04114 | Oocyte meiosis | 3 | 0.012116 |
Validation of the diagnostic effectiveness of the six hub genes using GSE56315
ROC analysis was performed from the six aberrantly expressed hub genes from GSE56315. The ROC curves of these six hub genes all indicated favorable diagnostic values for BLBCL (Figure 4 and Table 4). In addition, the area under ROC curve (AUC) of PTGDS and CDC20 were 1.000 (P<0.01, Figure 4A and Table 4) and 0.999 (P<0.01, Figure 4D and Table 4), respectively.
Validation of ROC results of the six hub genes in DLBCL based on GSE56315
Gene . | AUC . | 95% CI . | P-value . |
---|---|---|---|
CDC20 | 0.999 | 0.997–1.000 | <0.01 |
MELK | 0.895 | 0.832–0.958 | <0.001 |
PBK | 0.786 | 0.676–0.896 | <0.001 |
PTGDS | 1.000 | 1.000–1.000 | <0.01 |
PCNA | 0.995 | 0.987–1.000 | <0.01 |
CDK1 | 0.861 | 0.784–0.939 | <0.01 |
Gene . | AUC . | 95% CI . | P-value . |
---|---|---|---|
CDC20 | 0.999 | 0.997–1.000 | <0.01 |
MELK | 0.895 | 0.832–0.958 | <0.001 |
PBK | 0.786 | 0.676–0.896 | <0.001 |
PTGDS | 1.000 | 1.000–1.000 | <0.01 |
PCNA | 0.995 | 0.987–1.000 | <0.01 |
CDK1 | 0.861 | 0.784–0.939 | <0.01 |
Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval.
High CDC20 and low PTGDS expression may be an indicator for poor OS and a combined panel of these two genes is a superior sensitive predictive tool
By mining data from TCGA DLBC, we estimated the association between the expression of these six hub genes and OS in DLBCL patients using SPSS 20.0 (Figure 5). Our analysis demonstrated that high CDC20 expression and low PTGDS expression were significantly associated with poor OS (P=0.042 and 0.033, respectively, Figure 5A,D), while the other four hub genes were not associated with OS (Figure 5B,C,E,F). To confirm our findings, data from GSE31312 (n=470) was analyzed using R2. Kaplan–Meier survival curves showed that CDC20 and PTGDS had the same prognosis values as that observed for TCGA DLBC (P=0.012 and 0.016, respectively, Figure 6).
Kaplan–Meier curves of OS for patients with high or low hub gene expression in TCGA DLBC
Kaplan–Meier curves of OS for DLBCL patients based on expression of the six hub genes in GSE31312
To develop a more sensitive predictive tool, we assembled a two-gene panel combining CDC20 and PTGDS based on the cohort from TCGA DLBC. Combination of CDC20 and PTGDS had a better prognostic value compared with CDC20 or PTGDS alone (AUC: 0.72 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.61–0.79] compared with 0.62 [0.53–0.68], P=0.026; AUC: 0.72 [95% CI: 0.61–0.79] compared with 0.65 [0.57–0.72], P=0.039; Figure 7).
Comparisons of the sensitivity and specificity for survival prediction using the combined CDC20 and PTGDS model, the CDC20 alone model, or the PTGDS alone model
CDC20 expression is negatively regulated by DNA methylation
We analyzed the 450 K methylation array data from TCGA DLBC to verify whether CDC20 or PTGDS expression may be regulated by their DNA methylation status. By comparing CDC20 and PTGDS DNA methylation levels, we found that the CDC20 gene was hypomethylated in the DLBCL dataset (β-value: 0.0375 ± 0.0132, Figure 8A,B), while PTGDS was hypermethylated (β-value: 0.4744 ± 0.1676, Figure 8C,D). Furthermore, we confirmed that CDC20 expression was reduced with increasing DNA methylation (Figure 9A,B), but PTGDS expression was not regulated by its DNA methylation status (Figure 9C,D).
The methylation levels of CDC20 and PTGDS in the TCGA DLBC
The DNA methylation levels of CDC20 and PTGDS and their prognostic value in TCGA DLBC
High CDC20 methylation may be an indicator of favorable OS in patients with DLBCL
Based on the above results, high CDC20 or low PTGDS expression may be a predictor for poor OS in DLBCL patients. We hypothesized that their methylation status may be associated with OS. Hence, we examined whether their methylation status was associated with OS. Compared with low CDC20 methylation, patients with high CDC20 methylation had significantly better OS (P=0.041) (Figure 9E). However, we failed to identity significant association between PTGDS methylation levels and OS (Figure 9F).
Discussion
Abundant basic and clinical studies have tried to decipher the cause and underlying mechanisms for DLBCL. This has led to a serious challenge for the diagnosis and treatment of DLBCL. This may be due to the majority of the studies having focussed on a single molecular event [13] or that the results generated from single cohorts with genetic heterogeneity [14]. In this study, we integrated three DLBCL cohorts profile datasets covering different periods and countries. We utilized bioinformatics methods to comprehensively analyze these databases, and identified 153 overlapping DEGs with 74 up-regulated and 79 down-regulated genes. Furthermore, GO analysis indicated that the overlapped genes were mostly involved in cell cycle process, cell division, M phase, transcription, regulation of RNA metabolic process and purine nucleotide metabolic process at the BP level. Furthermore, the signaling pathway enrichment analysis revealed that the majority of the overlapped DEGs were enriched for cell cycle check points, APC-Cdc20-mediated degradation of Nek2A, cell cycle, EMT, oocyte meiosis, and hematopoietic cell lineage signaling pathway. Cell cycle, oocyte meiosis, and EMT were identified as the major pathways for the most significant module of the overlapped DEGs. Our study offers new insights into the molecular mechanisms of tumorigenesis and progression of DLBCL and identified hub genes that may be potential therapeutic or diagnostic targets for DLBCL.
In recent years, integrated bioinformatics analysis has been progressively used for understanding cancer pathogenesis, development of potential biomarkers and molecular target therapies for diagnosis, and for the prognostication and treatment for various cancers. Ma et al. [15] identified CXCR4 as a potential biomarker for glioblastoma multiforme using integrated bioinformatics analysis and found that low expression of CXCR4 may indicate favorable OS for GBM patients. In addition, another study showed that the expression of BUB1B and CENPF were up-regulated in nasopharyngeal carcinoma and their high expression was associated with poor OS [16]. Similar studies have also been reported for DLBCL. Song et al. demonstrated that CD59 could predict response and outcome of DLBCL patients treated with R-CHOP in a single cohort study [14]. Another study identified a single molecular biomarker for the diagnosis and treatment of DLBCL using bioinformatics analysis [13]. However, compared with our study, their studies only analyzed gene expression profiles or only identified a single biomarker to predict survival. In our study, hub genes were selected by the degree of connectivity. We integrated three gene expression profiles, and then combined the results of MCODE and PPI to identify hub genes. Furthermore, we developed a CDC20–PTGDS combination panel to predict OS with more sensitively. Finally, our model was validated using TCGA DLBC and another independent cohort GSE31312 to increase confidence of our model.
In our study, six hub genes, i.e. CDC20, MELK, PBK, PTGDS, PCNA, and CDK1 were narrowed down, of which, CDC20 and PTGDS were the most significantly associated with OS. A number of these genes have been reported as biomarkers in previous studies. CDC20 is an oncogene that plays a pivotal role in mitotic progression. Suppressing the activity of CDC20 regulates the cell cycle and promotes apoptosis [17]. Wu et al. [18] reported that CDC20 was highly expressed in colorectal cancer and concluded that CDC20 was a predictor for adverse clinical outcomes and an independent prognostic factor. Kidokoro et al. [19] demonstrated that CDC20 repression mediates the tumor suppressive function of p53. These findings are in-line with p53 inactivation observed in various cancer tissues including glioma, lung cancer, and breast ductal carcinoma and is likely due to CDC20 up-regulation [19]. In human adult T-cell-leukemia (ATL) cells, studies have demonstrated that APCCDC20 is a physiological E3 ligase that promotes the ubiquitination and destruction of the tumor suppressor, Bim, thus conferring resistance of cancer cells to chemoradiation.
Our study provides a rationale for developing specific CDC20 inhibitors as efficient anticancer agents [20]. Although several studies have assessed the role of CDC20 for the initiation and progression of several human cancers including colorectal cancer, lung cancer, glioma, and ATL, few have studied the role of CDC20 in DLBCL. We verified the expression of CDC20 in DLBCL tissue was significantly higher compared with normal tissue, and patients with high CDC20 levels had an adverse prognosis. The expression level and clinical function of CDC20 in DLBCL is consistent with previous studies.
Several recent studies have demonstrated that PTGDS has important vascular functions [21] as well as being associated with cancer [22,23]. Several other studies have reported that PTGDS expression is lower in gastric cancer tissues compared with PTGDS, which was associated with better prognosis [24]. Similar results have also been observed in lung cancer [25]. Our study is the first to demonstrate the expression pattern of PTGDS and its prognostic value for DLBCL patients. In-line with previous studies, the expression level of PTGDS in our study was significantly lower in DLBCL compared with normal tissue. Based on survival analysis, we also demonstrated that low PTGDS expression levels were significantly correlated with poor OS in DLBCL patients based on data from TCGA DLBC and an independent cohort GSE31312 dataset.
EMT has been shown to enhance solid tumor metastasis, invasion, and proliferation [26]. Omori et al. [27] reported that endothelial PTGDS deficiency could lead to accelerated vascular hyperpermeability, angiogenesis, and EMT in tumors, which in turn reduced tumor cell apoptosis. In our study, pathway enrichment analysis demonstrated that PTGDS was enriched in EMT and was in-line with the above-mentioned studies in which deficiency in PTGDS induced EMT. Lemma et al. [26] showed that EMT is also present in lymphomas. Both ZEB1 and Slug, EMT-mediating transcription factors (TFs), were highly expressed and associated with adverse prognosis in DLBCL. Taken together, we hypothesized that PTGDS inhibits EMT and suppresses tumor proliferation and invasion by regulating the expression of ZEB1 and Slug in DLBCL. Future experiments need to be performed to verify this hypothesis.
Recent studies suggest that DNA repair enzyme MGMT methylation is a significant prognostic factor for patients with DLBCL [28,29]. However, the prognostic role of CDC20 and PTGDS methylation levels in DLBCL has never been reported previously. By data mining using the DLBCL cohort in the TCGA database, CDC20 hypomethylation and PTGDS hypermethylation were observed in DLBCL patients. We demonstrated that CDC20 expression was negatively regulated by its DNA methylation, whereas PTGDS was not affected by its methylation status. DNA promoter methylation may have prognostic value for DLBCL [30]. We examined the prognostic value of CDC20 promoter methylation in DLBCL and found that favorable OS was observed in patients with high CDC20 promoter methylation (P=0.041). This suggests that CDC20 promoter methylation status may be a biomarker for predicting OS in patients with DLBCL.
Combined predictive models for OS is superior to predictive models relying on a single predictor [31]. Liu et al. [32] reported that combining two independent prognostic factors, i.e. a five miRNA signature and TNM stage, was a more sensitive predictor for nasopharyngeal carcinoma. In another study, the FGD3-SUSD3 metagene model was demonstrated to have a superior prognostic value for breast cancer [33]. Our two genes combined panel for DLBCL, in which low CDC20 expression and high PTGDS expression, had a superior prognostic value compared with CDC20 or PTGDS alone. This CDC20-PTGDS combined model could allow clinicians to identify high-risk patients and lead to a more personalized treatment strategy for patients with DLBCL.
Conclusion
In summary, CDC20 and PTGDS were identified from the DEGs and CDC20 overexpression and PTGDS low expression were associated with poor prognosis. CDC20 expression is negatively regulated by DNA methylation in DLBCL and its hypomethylation may be a potential indicator for adverse OS. In addition, our study demonstrated that cell cycle, oocyte meiosis, and EMT were potential mechanisms and pathways associated with DLBCL. However, we need to perform additional experiments to verify our results generated from our bioinformatics analysis.
It has been reported that a single biomarker or pathway is not sufficient to explain cancer pathogenesis because of the complex molecular mechanisms that govern oncogenesis [34]. Hence, we assembled a prognostic score model combining the expression levels of CDC20 and PTGDS. This combined gene expression model was more sensitive with higher predictive power. In our present study, prognostic signatures including CDC20 and PTGDS were identified from the DEGs and could predict OS in DLBCL patients, which will provide useful guidance for therapeutic applications.
Data availability
All data were extracted from previously published freely available datasets.
Funding
This work was supported by the Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation [grant number ZR2017PH057]; and the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 81570201].
Competing interests
The authors declare that there are no competing interests associated with the manuscript.
Author contribution
Y.Z. conceived and designed the present study, and reviewed the manuscript. C.S. was responsible for literature search, data acquisition, data analysis, statistical analysis, and manuscript preparation. X.C. and C.W. performed data analysis, statistical analysis, and literature search. X.W. and B.X. performed data acquisition and analysis.
Abbreviations
- APC
anaphase promoting complex
- ATL
adult T-cell-leukemia
- AUC
area under ROC curve
- BP
biological process
- CC
cellular component
- Cdc20
cell division cycle 20
- CI
confidence interval
- DAVID
Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery
- DEG
differentially expressed gene
- DLBCL
diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
- EMT
epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition
- GBM
glioblastoma multiforme
- GEO
Gene Expression Omnibus
- GO
gene ontology
- LogFC
log fold change
- MCODE
Molecular Complex Detection
- MF
molecular function
- NGS
next-generation sequencing
- OS
overall survival
- PPI
protein–protein interaction
- PTGDS
prostaglandin D2 synthase
- ROC
receiver operating characteristic
- STRING
Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes
- TCGA
The Cancer Genome Atlas