Complex networks of miRNA-transcription factors mediate gene dosage compensation in aneuploid cancer

biorxiv(2020)

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Abstract
Cancer complexity is consequence of enormous genomic instability leading to aneuploidy, a hallmark of most cancers. We hypothesize that dosage compensation of critical genes could arise from systems-level properties of complex networks of microRNAs (miRNA) and transcription factors (TF) as a way for cancer cells to withstand the negative effects of aneuploidy. We studied gene dosage compensation at the transcriptional level on data of the NCI-60 cancer cell line panel with the aid of computational models to identify candidate genes with low tolerance to variation in gene expression despite high variation in copy numbers. We identified a network of TF and miRNAs validated interactions with those genes to construct a mathematical model where the property of dosage compensation emerged for MYC and STAT3. Compensation was mediated by feedback and feed-forward motifs with 4 miRNAs and was dependent on the kinetic parameters of these TF-miRNA interactions, indicating that network analysis was not enough to identify this emergent property. The inhibition of miRNAs compensating MYC suggest a therapeutic potential of targeting gene dosage compensation against aneuploid cancer.
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Key words
miRNAs,gene dosage compensation,cancer,NCI60,systems biology
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