Network strategies to study Epstein-Barr virus associated carcinomas and potential etiological mechanisms for oncogenesis
S. Chatterjee, B. S. Sanjeev

TL;DR
This study uses network analysis and community detection to identify key genes and pathways involved in EBV-associated carcinomas, revealing potential mechanisms of oncogenesis and therapeutic targets.
Contribution
It introduces a novel network-based approach combining disease-gene bipartite graphs and community detection to explore EBV's role in various cancers.
Findings
Identified top 10 genes involved in EBV-associated carcinomas.
Discovered that EBV targets critical pathways like apoptosis and cell proliferation.
Highlighted the significance of the ABL1 gene in multiple cancer-related processes.
Abstract
Diseased conditions are a consequence of some abnormality that are associated with clinical conditions in numerous cells and tissues affecting various organs. The common role of EBV (Epstein-Barr virus) in causing infectious mononucleosis (IM) affecting B-cells and epithelial cells and the development of EBV-associated cancers has been an area of active research. Investigating such significant interactions may help discover new therapeutic targets for certain EBV-associated lymphoproliferative (Burkitt's Lymphoma and Hodgkin's Lymphoma) and non-lymphoproliferative diseases (Gastric cancer and Nasopharyngeal cancer). Based on the DisGeNET (v7.0) data set, we constructed a disease-gene network bipartite graph to identify genes that are involved in various carcinomas namely, gastric cancer (GC), nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC), Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) and Burkitt's lymphoma (BL). Using the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral-associated cancers and disorders · RNA modifications and cancer
