PRKDC is a prognostic marker for poor survival in gastric cancer patients and regulates DNA damage response.

Pathology - Research and Practice(2019)

Cited 13|Views27
No score
Abstract
A hallmark of gastric cancer is the high rate of genomic instability associated with deregulation of DNA damage repair pathways. DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase Catalytic Subunit (PRKDC) is a key component of the non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway. By reanalyzing transcriptome data of 80 pairs of gastric cancer tumors and the adjacent normal tissues from non-treated patients, we identified PRKDC as the top upregulated DNA damage repair genes in gastric cancer. High expression of PRKDC is associated with poor survival of gastric cancer patients, and genomic amplification of the gene is frequently observed across most gastric cancer subtypes. Knockdown of PRKDC in gastric cell lines resulted in reduced proliferation and cell cycle arrest. Furthermore, we showed that loss of PRKDC induced DNA damage and enhanced gastric cancer cell chemosensitivity to DNA-damaging reagents. Together, our results suggest that PRKDC is a prognostic marker of poor survival and is a putative target to overcome chemoresistance in gastric cancer.
More
Translated text
Key words
Gastric cancer,PRKDC,DNA damage repair,Chemoresistance
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined