cTULIP: application of a human-based RNA-seq primary tumor classification tool for cross-species primary tumor classification in canine

Publication Type
Journal Article
Publication Year
2023
Authors
Long, Jiaxin
Ganakammal, Satishkumar R.
Jones, Sara E.
Kothandaraman, Harish
Dhawan, Deepika
Ogas, Joe
Knapp, Deborah W.
Beyers, Matthew
Lanman, Nadia A.
Abstract

Introduction: The domestic dog, Canis familiaris, is quickly gaining traction as an advantageous model for use in the study of cancer, one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Naturally occurring canine cancers share clinical, histological, and molecular characteristics with the corresponding human diseases.

Methods: In this study, we take a deep-learning approach to test how similar the gene expression profile of canine glioma and bladder cancer (BLCA) tumors are to the corresponding human tumors. We likewise develop a tool for identifying misclassified or outlier samples in large canine oncological datasets, analogous to that which was developed for human datasets.

Results: We test a number of machine learning algorithms and found that a convolutional neural network outperformed logistic regression and random forest approaches. We use a recently developed RNA-seq-based convolutional neural network, TULIP, to test the robustness of a human-data-trained primary tumor classification tool on cross-species primary tumor prediction. Our study ultimately highlights the molecular similarities between canine and human BLCA and glioma tumors, showing that protein-coding one-to-one homologs shared between humans and canines, are sufficient to distinguish between BLCA and gliomas.

Discussion: The results of this study indicate that using protein-coding one-to-one homologs as the features in the input layer of TULIP performs good primary tumor prediction in both humans and canines. Furthermore, our analysis shows that our selected features also contain the majority of features with known clinical relevance in BLCA and gliomas. Our success in using a human-data-trained model for cross-species primary tumor prediction also sheds light on the conservation of oncological pathways in humans and canines, further underscoring the importance of the canine model system in the study of human disease.

Citation
Date
Volume
13
Publication Title
Frontiers in Oncology
DOI
10.3389/fonc.2023.1216892
Publication Tags
Automatic Tags
bladder cancer
comparative oncology
deep learning
glioma
machine learning
tumor classification
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