MZMeng Zhang
Papers(2)
An Innovative Immune …Genome-wide perturbat…
Collaborators(7)
Tianyi XuXingling QiYipeng FuYumeng WangChong LuGuiling LiJing Peng
Institutions(2)
Obstetrics And Gyneco…Unknown Institution

Papers

An Innovative Immune Score‐Based Prognostic Nomogram for Patients with Cervical Cancer

Background. In the past few years, the immune system and tumor immune microenvironment are becoming increasingly popular as more work has been accomplished in this field. However, nomograms based on immune‐related characteristics for prognosis prediction of cervical cancer have not been fully explored to our knowledge. We constructed a novel immune score‐based nomogram to predict patients with high risk and poor prognosis. Materials and Methods. 198 patients with cervical cancer from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database were included in our study. Immune scores were generated with Estimation of STromal and Immune cells in MAlignant Tumor tissues using Expression data (ESTIMATE) algorithm, and clinic‐pathological characteristics were also included for subsequent analysis. Cox proportional hazards regression models were performed for univariate and multivariate analyses to screen the significant factors, and a prognostic nomogram was built. Bootstrap resampling analysis was used for internal validation. The calibration curve and concordance index (C‐index) were used to assess the predictive performance of the nomogram. Results. Patients were split into three subgroups based on immune scores. We found that patients with high immune scores conferred significantly better overall survival (OS) compared with those with medium and low immune scores (hazard ratio (HR), 0.305; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.108‐0.869). A nomogram with a C‐index of 0.720 had a favorable performance for predicting survival rate for clinical use by combining immune scores with other clinical features. The calibration curves at 3 and 5 years suggested a good consistency between the predicted OS and the actual OS probability. Conclusions. Our work highlights the potential clinical application significance of immune score‐based nomogram in predicting the OS of cervical cancer patients.

Genome-wide perturbations of A-to-I RNA editing dysregulated circular RNAs promoting the development of cervical cancer

Cervical cancer, the second most common female malignant tumor, seriously threatens women's health and lives. Despite the availability of the HPV vaccine, effective treatment options for cervical cancer are still lacking. New research perspectives now clarify that RNA editing dysregulation and changes in circRNA expression are jointly involved in disease pathogenesis, so molecular changes associated with circRNA and RNA editing may provide clues for the development of new therapeutic strategies for cervical cancer. In this study, we designed a series of pipelines to identify and analyze dysregulated RNA editing events in circRNAs. Our findings indicate a decrease in A-to-I RNA editing levels in cervical cancer compared to normal tissues, and editing may influence the back-splicing process of circRNAs through structural modifications of Alu elements. Moreover, our research reveals that RNA editing could modulate circRNA biogenesis by influencing RNA binding protein (RBP) binding on a transcriptome-wide scale, as well as influence the expression and coding potential of circRNAs. Importantly, we identified three RNA editing sites that could serve as potential biomarkers. In summary, our study presents a comprehensive landscape of RNA editing perturbations in circRNAs, providing new insights into the complex relationship between RNA editing and circRNA dysregulation in cervical cancer.

2Works
2Papers
7Collaborators