CD24 is a Potential Biomarker for Prognosis in Human Breast Carcinoma

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Abstract

Background/Aims: CD24 is a highly glycosylated mucin-like antigen on the cell surface, which has recently emerged as a novel oncogene and metastasis promoter. We performed bioinformatics analysis to investigate whether CD24 can serve as a prognostic indicator in breast cancer. Methods: CD24 expression was assessed using SAGE Genie tools and Oncomine analysis. The PrognoScan database, Kaplan-Meier Plotter, and bc-GenExMiner were used to identify the prognostic roles of CD24 in breast cancer. Results: We found that CD24 was more frequently overexpressed in breast cancer than in normal breast tissue and correlated with worse prognosis. Meanwhile, high CD24 expression was associated with increased risk of HER2, basal-like, triple-negative breast cancer, and higher Scarff-Bloom-Richardson grade. Data mining in multiple big databases confirmed a positive correlation between CD24 mRNA expression and SDC1 mRNA expression in breast cancer tissue. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that CD24 overexpression is more common in breast cancer than in corresponding normal tissue. In addition, CD24 and SDC1 can serve as prognostic indicators for breast cancer. However, large-scale and comprehensive research is needed to further confirm these results.

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APA

Jing, X., Cui, X., Liang, H., Hao, C., Yang, Z., Li, X., … Han, C. (2018). CD24 is a Potential Biomarker for Prognosis in Human Breast Carcinoma. Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry, 48(1), 111–119. https://doi.org/10.1159/000491667

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