A network analysis revealed the essential and common downstream proteins related to inguinal hernia

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Abstract

Although more than 1 in 4 men develop symptomatic inguinal hernia during their lifetime, the molecular mechanism behind inguinal hernia remains unknown. Here, we explored the protein- protein interaction network built on known inguinal hernia-causative genes to identify essential and common downstream proteins for inguinal hernia formation. We discovered that PIK3R1, PTPN11, TGFBR1, CDC42, SOS1, and KRAS were the most essential inguinal hernia-causative proteins and UBC, GRB2, CTNNB1, HSP90AA1, CBL, PLCG1, and CRK were listed as the most commonly-involved downstream proteins. In addition, the transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine kinase signaling pathway was the most frequently found inguinal hernia-related pathway. Our in silico approach was able to uncover a novel molecular mechanism underlying inguinal hernia formation by identifying inguinal herniarelated essential proteins and potential common downstream proteins of inguinal herniacausative proteins.

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Mao, Y., Chen, L., Li, J., Shangguan, A. J., Kujawa, S., & Zhao, H. (2020). A network analysis revealed the essential and common downstream proteins related to inguinal hernia. PLoS ONE, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226885

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