Altered expression of the L-arginine/nitric oxide pathway in ovarian cancer: metabolic biomarkers and biological implications

Author:

Chen Linfeng,Tang Qiming,Zhang Keying,Huang Qianyang,Ding Yun,Jin Bo,Liu Szumam,Hwa KuoYuan,Chou C. James,Zhang Yani,Thyparambil Sheeno,Liao Weili,Han Zhi,Mortensen Richard,Schilling James,Li Zhen,Heaton Robert,Tian Lu,Cohen Harvey J.,Sylvester Karl G.,Arent Rebecca C.,Zhao Xinyang,McElhinney Doff B.,Wu Yumei,Bai Wenpei,Ling Xuefeng B.

Abstract

Abstract Motivation Ovarian cancer (OC) is a highly lethal gynecological malignancy. Extensive research has shown that OC cells undergo significant metabolic alterations during tumorigenesis. In this study, we aim to leverage these metabolic changes as potential biomarkers for assessing ovarian cancer. Methods A functional module-based approach was utilized to identify key gene expression pathways that distinguish different stages of ovarian cancer (OC) within a tissue biopsy cohort. This cohort consisted of control samples (n = 79), stage I/II samples (n = 280), and stage III/IV samples (n = 1016). To further explore these altered molecular pathways, minimal spanning tree (MST) analysis was applied, leading to the formulation of metabolic biomarker hypotheses for OC liquid biopsy. To validate, a multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) based quantitative LCMS/MS method was developed. This method allowed for the precise quantification of targeted metabolite biomarkers using an OC blood cohort comprising control samples (n = 464), benign samples (n = 3), and OC samples (n = 13). Results Eleven functional modules were identified as significant differentiators (false discovery rate, FDR < 0.05) between normal and early-stage, or early-stage and late-stage ovarian cancer (OC) tumor tissues. MST analysis revealed that the metabolic L-arginine/nitric oxide (L-ARG/NO) pathway was reprogrammed, and the modules related to "DNA replication" and "DNA repair and recombination" served as anchor modules connecting the other nine modules. Based on this analysis, symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA) and arginine were proposed as potential liquid biopsy biomarkers for OC assessment. Our quantitative LCMS/MS analysis on our OC blood cohort provided direct evidence supporting the use of the SDMA-to-arginine ratio as a liquid biopsy panel to distinguish between normal and OC samples, with an area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 98.3%. Conclusion Our comprehensive analysis of tissue genomics and blood quantitative LC/MSMS metabolic data shed light on the metabolic reprogramming underlying OC pathophysiology. These findings offer new insights into the potential diagnostic utility of the SDMA-to-arginine ratio for OC assessment. Further validation studies using adequately powered OC cohorts are warranted to fully establish the clinical effectiveness of this diagnostic test.

Funder

Beijing Shijitan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Open Research Funding of Laboratory of central laboratory

Livingston Ovarian Cancer Foundation Award

Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics,Oncology

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