Project description:We report proteogenomic analysis of diffuse gastric cancers (GCs) in young population. Phosphoproteome data elucidated signaling pathways associated with somatic mutations based on mutation-phosphorylation correlations. Moreover, correlations between mRNA and protein abundances provided potential oncogenes and tumor suppressors associated with patient survival. Furthermore, integrated clustering of mRNA, protein, phosphorylation, and N-glycosylation data identified four subtypes of diffuse GCs. Distinguishing these subtypes was possible by proteomic data. Four subtypes were associated with proliferation, immune response, metabolism, and invasion, respectively; and associations of the subtypes with immune- and invasion-related pathways were identified mainly by phosphorylation and N-glycosylation data. Therefore, our proteogenomic analysis provides additional information beyond genomic analyses, which can improve understanding of cancer biology and patient stratification in diffuse GCs.
Project description:Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide and liver metastasis remains the major cause of death in CRC. Extensive genomic analysis provided valuable insight into the pathogenesis and progression of CRC. However, the major proteogenomic characterization of CRC liver metastasis is still unknown. We investigated proteogenomic characterization and performed comprehensive integrative genomic analysis of human colorectal cancer liver metastasis.