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1.
Cancer Inform ; 23: 11769351241262211, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39045040

ABSTRACT

Objectives: Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC), a rare and aggressive adrenal cortex cancer, poses significant challenges due to high mortality, poor prognosis, and early post-surgery recurrence. Variability in survival across ACC stages emphasizes the need to uncover its molecular underpinnings. Adrenocortical adenoma, a benign tumor, adds to diagnostic challenges, highlighting the necessity for molecular insights. The Non-SMC Associated Condensin Complex (NCAP) gene family, recognized for roles in chromosomal structure and cell cycle control. This study focuses on evaluating NCAP gene functions and importance in ACC through gene expression profiling to identify diagnostic and therapeutic targets. Methods: Microarray datasets from ACC patients, obtained from the Gene Expression Omnibus database, were normalized to eliminate batch effects. Differential expression analysis of NCAP family genes, facilitated by the GEPIA2 database, included survival and pathological stage evaluations. A Protein-Protein Interaction network was constructed using GeneMANIA, and additional insights were gained through Gene Ontology enrichment analysis, correlation analysis, and ROC curve analysis. Results: ACC samples exhibited elevated levels of NCAPG, NCAPG2, and NCAPH compared to normal and adenoma samples. Increased expression of these genes correlated with poor overall survival, particularly in advanced disease stages. The Protein-Protein Interaction network highlighted interactions with related proteins, and Gene Ontology enrichment analysis demonstrated their involvement in chromosomal structure and control. Differentially expressed NCAP genes showed positive associations, and ROC curve analysis indicated their high discriminatory power in identifying ACC from adenoma and normal samples. Conclusion: The study emphasizes the potential importance of NCAPG, NCAPG2, and NCAPH in ACC, suggesting roles in tumor aggressiveness and diagnostic relevance. These genes could serve as therapeutic targets and markers for ACC, but further exploration into their molecular activities and validation studies is imperative to fully harness their diagnostic and therapeutic potential, advancing precision medicine approaches against this rare but lethal malignancy.

2.
Biochem Biophys Rep ; 37: 101644, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38298209

ABSTRACT

Exosomes are a type of extracellular vesicle that contains bioactive molecules that can be secreted by most cells. Nevertheless, the content of these cells differs depending on the cell from which they originate. The exosome plays a crucial role in modulating intercellular communication by conveying molecular messages to neighboring or distant cells. Cancer-derived exosomes can transfer several types of molecules into the tumor microenvironment, including high levels of microRNA (miRNA). These miRNAs significantly affect cell proliferation, angiogenesis, apoptosis resistance, metastasis, and immune evasion. Increasing evidence indicates that exosomal miRNAs (exomiRs) are crucial to regulating cancer resistance to apoptosis. In cancer cells, exomiRs orchestrate communication channels between them and their surrounding microenvironment, modulating gene expression and controlling apoptosis signaling pathways. This review presents an outline of present-day knowledge of the mechanisms that affect target cells and drive cancer resistance to apoptosis. Also, our study looks at the regulatory role of exomiRs in mediating intercellular communication between tumor cells and surrounding microenvironmental cells, specifically stromal and immune cells, to evade therapy-induced apoptosis.

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