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Potential diagnostic biomarkers: 6 cuproptosis- and ferroptosis-related genes linking immune infiltration in acute myocardial infarction

Mengdan Miao, Shan‐Hu Cao, Yifei Tian, Da Liu, Lixia Chen, Qiaoying Chai, Mei Wei, Shaoguang Sun, Le Wang, Shuanli Xin, Gang Liu, Mingqi Zheng

2023Genes and Immunity59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The current diagnostic biomarkers of acute myocardial infarction (AMI), troponins, lack specificity and exist as false positives in other non-cardiac diseases. Previous studies revealed that cuproptosis, ferroptosis, and immune infiltration are all involved in the development of AMI. We hypothesize that combining the analysis of cuproptosis, ferroptosis, and immune infiltration in AMI will help identify more precise diagnostic biomarkers. The results showed that a total of 19 cuproptosis- and ferroptosis-related genes (CFRGs) were differentially expressed between the healthy and AMI groups. Functional enrichment analysis showed that the differential CFRGs were mostly enriched in biological processes related to oxidative stress and the inflammatory response. The immune infiltration status analyzed by ssGSEA found elevated levels of macrophages, neutrophils, and CCR in AMI. Then, we screened 6 immune-related CFRGs (CXCL2, DDIT3, DUSP1, CDKN1A, TLR4, STAT3) to construct a nomogram for predicting AMI and validated it in the GSE109048 dataset. Moreover, we also identified 5 pivotal miRNAs and 10 candidate drugs that target the 6 feature genes. Finally, RT-qPCR analysis verified that all 6 feature genes were upregulated in both animals and patients. In conclusion, our study reveals the significance of immune-related CFRGs in AMI and provides new insights for AMI diagnosis and treatment.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemMyocardial infarctionBiologyGeneFalse positive paradoxInflammationImmunologyInfiltration (HVAC)MedicineInternal medicineGeneticsPhysicsThermodynamicsMachine learningComputer scienceFerroptosis and cancer prognosisCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchRNA modifications and cancer