Identification of promising lung cancer drug targets from human plasma proteins: Mendelian randomization, single-cell RNA sequencing analysis
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Background: Lung cancer (LC) is the most prevalent form of malignant neoplasm globally, as well as the major cause of cancer-related death. Identifying effective pharmaceutical targets is paramount in advancing the development of treatment modalities for lung cancer. Method : Protein-wide Mendelian randomization (MR) was used in this study. The present study collated data on plasma proteins from a protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) study with a total of 4907 individuals. Genetic associations with LC were obtained from GWAS, including 3791 cases and 489012 controls. Integration of pQTL and LC genome-wide association study (GWAS) data was employed to identify candidate proteins. MR used single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as a genetic tool to estimate the causal effect of exposure on the outcome, while reverse Mendelian randomization was performed to assess the presence of false positives. The present study utilized these approaches to evaluate the causal relationship between plasma proteins and LC. Finally, protein-protein interaction (PPI) and functional enrichment analyses were performed to illustrate potential links between proteins and current LC drugs. Finally, drug prediction and molecular docking were performed to predict drugs and explored the expression distribution of key genes by single-cell sequencing. Result : We identified 46 plasma proteins that are strongly associated with LC Fifteen of these proteins have protective effects. Among them, MMP8(OR = 0.87,95%CI:0.78-0.97,p=0.013)had the most significant protective effect. In contrast, 31 proteins increased the risk of LC. IL36A(OR =1.20,95%CI:1.041-1.38,p=0.012) exhibited the most significant MR result . Notably, COL2A1, MMP19 showed reverse causality. This was further verified by enrichment analysis, which confirmed the causal effect of these proteins. In addition, the researchers used the DSigDB database to predict potentially effective intervening drugs and obtained nine possible drugs. Molecular docking showed that the drugs bind very much to the proteins . KDR and ANGPTL4 are abundantly expressed in lung tissue and are differentially expressed between cells. Conclusion : The present study has revealed six potential drug targets for the treatment of LC. Drugs designed to target these proteins will be more likely to attain success in clinical trials and are expected to assist in the development of LC drugs and reduce drug development costs.