Investigator

Dana A. M. Mustafa

Assistant Professor, Leader of the Spatial Biology Facility · Erasmus MC, Pathology, Tumor Immuno-Pathology Laboratory (TIP Lab)

DAMDana A. M. Mustafa
Papers(1)
Unraveling Difference…
Collaborators(3)
Heleen van BeekhuizenPatricia C. Ewing‐Gra…Ralf L. O. van de Laar
Institutions(1)
Erasmus Mc

Papers

Unraveling Differences in Molecular Mechanisms and Immunological Contrasts between Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Adenocarcinoma of the Cervix

This study aims to refine our understanding of the inherent heterogeneity in cervical cancer by exploring differential gene expression profiles, immune cell infiltration dynamics, and implicated signaling pathways in the two predominant histological types of cervix carcinoma, Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) and Adenocarcinoma (ADC). Targeted gene expression data that were previously generated from samples of primary cervical cancer were re-analyzed. The samples were grouped based on their histopathology, comparing SCC to ADC. Each tumor in the study was confirmed to be high risk human papilloma virus (hrHPV) positive. A total of 21 cervical cancer samples were included, with 11 cases of SCC and 10 of ADC. Data analysis revealed a total of 26 differentially expressed genes, with 19 genes being overexpressed in SCC compared to ADC (Benjamini–Hochberg (BH)-adjusted p-value < 0.05). Importantly, the immune checkpoint markers CD274 and CTLA4 demonstrated significantly higher expression in SCC compared to ADC. In addition, SCC showed a higher infiltration of immune cells, including B and T cells, and cytotoxic cells. Higher activation of a variety of pathways was found in SCC samples including cytotoxicity, interferon signaling, metabolic stress, lymphoid compartment, hypoxia, PI3k-AKT, hedgehog signaling and Notch signaling pathways. Our findings show distinctive gene expression patterns, signaling pathway activations, and trends in immune cell infiltration between SCC and ADC in cervical cancer. This study underscores the heterogeneity within primary cervical cancer, emphasizing the potential benefits of subdividing these tumours based on histological and molecular differences.

46Works
1Papers
3Collaborators
Pancreatic NeoplasmsBiomarkers, TumorUterine Cervical NeoplasmsCarcinoma, Squamous CellAdenocarcinomaPapillomavirus InfectionsPrognosis

Positions

2016–

Assistant Professor, Leader of the Spatial Biology Facility

Erasmus MC · Pathology, Tumor Immuno-Pathology Laboratory (TIP Lab)

2015–

Postdoc

Technische Universiteit Eindhoven · Mechanical Engineering / Microsystem Group

2010–

Postdoc

Erasmus MC · Pathology

2009–

Scientist

Erasmus MC · Neurology

2005–

PhD student

Erasmus MC · Pathology

2003–

Senior Molecular Geneticist

King Hussein Cancer Center · Pathology

2003–

Senior Molecular Geneticist

Jordan Hospital · pathology

2003–

Molecular Geneticist

Al Khalidi Hospital and Medical Center · Pathology

2002–

Geneticist

National Diabetes Center · Molecular biology

2000–

teacher

Jordan University of Science and Technology · Medicine, Microbiology

Education

2009

PhD.

Erasmus MC · Pathology

2002

MSc.

Jordan University of Science and Technology · medicine

2000

B. Sc.

University of Jordan · Science

Country

NL

Keywords
Molecular BiologyBrain MetastasesAngiogenesisOrgan-on-a chipProteomicsData AnalysisGenomicsTeachingCollaborationsGlioblastomaBreast cancer brain metastasisLung cancer brain metastasis