학술논문

AI-assisted discovery of an ethnicity-influenced driver of cell transformation in esophageal and gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinomas
Document Type
article
Source
JCI Insight. 7(18)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
Digestive Diseases
Genetics
Clinical Research
Rare Diseases
Good Health and Well Being
Adenocarcinoma
Artificial Intelligence
Barrett Esophagus
Case-Control Studies
Cell Transformation
Neoplastic
Cross-Sectional Studies
Esophageal Neoplasms
Esophagogastric Junction
Ethnicity
Humans
Interleukin-8
Tumor Microenvironment
Bioinformatics
Gastroenterology
Immunology
Neutrophils
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Although Barrett's metaplasia of the esophagus (BE) is the only known precursor lesion to esophageal adenocarcinomas (EACs), drivers of cellular transformation in BE remain incompletely understood. We use an artificial intelligence-guided network approach to study EAC initiation and progression. Key predictions are subsequently validated in a human organoid model, in patient-derived biopsy specimens of BE, a case-control study of genomics of BE progression, and in a cross-sectional study of 113 patients with BE and EACs. Our model classified healthy esophagus from BE and BE from EACs in several publicly available gene expression data sets (n = 932 samples). The model confirmed that all EACs must originate from BE and pinpointed a CXCL8/IL8↔neutrophil immune microenvironment as a driver of cellular transformation in EACs and gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinomas. This driver is prominent in White individuals but is notably absent in African Americans (AAs). Network-derived gene signatures, independent signatures of neutrophil processes, CXCL8/IL8 expression, and an absolute neutrophil count (ANC) are associated with risk of progression. SNPs associated with changes in ANC by ethnicity (e.g., benign ethnic neutropenia [BEN]) modify that risk. Findings define a racially influenced immunological basis for cell transformation and suggest that BEN in AAs may be a deterrent to BE→EAC progression.