Investigator

Mateusz Kciuk

Assistant Professor (PhD) · University of Łódź, Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Genetics

MKMateusz Kciuk
Papers(1)
AP-2 Transcription Fa…
Collaborators(5)
Piotr GromekRenata KontekŻaneta Kałuzińska-Koł…Damian KołatElżbieta Płuciennik
Institutions(2)
Medical University Of…University of Łódź

Papers

AP-2 Transcription Factors as Regulators of Ferroptosis: A Family-Wide Profiling in Diverse Cancer Contexts

Ferroptosis is an iron-dependent programmed cell death (PCD) implicated in cancer therapy response, yet its transcriptional control remains unevenly characterized and often centered on a limited subset of transcription factors (TFs) rather than systematically addressing TF families. The Activating enhancer-binding Protein-2 (AP-2) family of TFs is a plausible but understudied regulatory node linking oncogenic programs to ferroptosis, with prior research limited to AP-2α and AP-2γ, suggesting anti-ferroptotic and pro-tumorigenic roles. Thus, the present study aimed to provide a family-wide analysis of the relationships between AP-2 and ferroptosis across tumors in which this PCD type is considered biologically and clinically relevant. The research integrates ferroptosis gene modules with AP-2 targetomes, tumor–normal expression comparisons, survival stratification, ferroptosis scoring, cross-cohort functional analyses, and signaling pathway projection extending canonical ferroptosis circuits with AP-2–associated non-canonical elements. Consistent associations between AP-2 expression, prognosis, and ferroptosis score were observed in five tumor cohorts: cervical squamous cell carcinoma, glioblastoma, ovarian serous cystadenocarcinoma, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and thyroid carcinoma. In addition, cross-cohort clustering highlighted genes enriched in redox- and lipid-metabolism programs linked to apoptosis and autophagy-dependent death. Among the candidates emerging from these analyses, ferroptotic markers (LOX, PTGS2, and NQO1) and AP-2–linked nodes such as CD36, DUOX1, EPHA2, MUC1, PTPRC, SNAI2, and TP63 warrant targeted functional and binding validation to infer whether these associations reflect direct AP-2 regulatory mechanisms. Most importantly, AP-2–centered research appears to be a valuable area for guiding studies of tumor-specific ferroptosis vulnerability or resistance.

63Works
1Papers
5Collaborators
NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorApoptosisColorectal NeoplasmsFerroptosisPrognosisPancreatic Neoplasms

Positions

Assistant Professor (PhD)

University of Łódź · Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Genetics