Identifying the Signatures and Rules of Circulating Extracellular MicroRNA for Distinguishing Cancer Subtypes

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Abstract

Cancer is one of the most threatening diseases to humans. It can invade multiple significant organs, including lung, liver, stomach, pancreas, and even brain. The identification of cancer biomarkers is one of the most significant components of cancer studies as the foundation of clinical cancer diagnosis and related drug development. During the large-scale screening for cancer prevention and early diagnosis, obtaining cancer-related tissues is impossible. Thus, the identification of cancer-associated circulating biomarkers from liquid biopsy targeting has been proposed and has become the most important direction for research on clinical cancer diagnosis. Here, we analyzed pan-cancer extracellular microRNA profiles by using multiple machine-learning models. The extracellular microRNA profiles on 11 cancer types and non-cancer were first analyzed by Boruta to extract important microRNAs. Selected microRNAs were then evaluated by the Max-Relevance and Min-Redundancy feature selection method, resulting in a feature list, which were fed into the incremental feature selection method to identify candidate circulating extracellular microRNA for cancer recognition and classification. A series of quantitative classification rules was also established for such cancer classification, thereby providing a solid research foundation for further biomarker exploration and functional analyses of tumorigenesis at the level of circulating extracellular microRNA.

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Yuan, F., Li, Z., Chen, L., Zeng, T., Zhang, Y. H., Ding, S., … Cai, Y. D. (2021). Identifying the Signatures and Rules of Circulating Extracellular MicroRNA for Distinguishing Cancer Subtypes. Frontiers in Genetics, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.651610

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