Volver a Noticias Científicas
Investigación Científica

Detalles del Artículo

Traducción pendiente · disponible próximamente

Single-cell data analysis of lung cancer brain metastasis reveals SEC61G serves as a potential risk indicator.

¿Qué significa esto para los pacientes?

AI

Inicia sesión o regístrate para generar explicaciones con IA

Lung adenocarcinoma is a highly malignant and life-threatening disease, with brain metastases representing a major cause of mortality in patients with lung cancer. Although extensive research has focused on interpreting single-cell data from lung cancer brain metastases, most studies emphasize the immune microenvironment, leaving the molecular mechanisms and pathways involving epithelial cells under explored. In this study, we investigated epithelial cells using single-cell data derived from lung cancer brain metastases (comprising six lung cancer and six lung-to-brain metastasis samples) and identified a significant enrichment of the protein-folding pathway in brain metastases, with SEC61G emerging as a particularly prominent contributor. Subsequent in silico replication in clinical samples and public cohort confirmed that SEC61G can serve as a biomarker for brain metastases in lung cancer.

These results provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms driving brain metastases in lung cancer and underscore the potential of SEC61G as both a therapeutic target and a diagnostic marker.

Our findings advance understanding of the metastatic process in lung adenocarcinoma and provide a foundation for developing targeted therapies aimed at improving patient outcomes.

Inicia sesión o regístrate para acceder al texto completo

Se abre en una nueva pestaña en la publicación original

Compartir y Discutir

Comentarios

¡Aún no hay comentarios. Sé el primero en comentar!

Enviar a mi oncólogo

Artículo: Single-cell data analysis of lung cancer brain metastasis reveals SEC61G serves as a potential risk indicator.

Autores: Li Y, Zhang Y, Tian W, Zhao Z, He L
Publicado: 2026-06-04
PMID: 42234055

Enlace: https://crcwarriors.org/article-detail.php?id=2319 | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42234055/

¡Regístrate para usar esta función!

Crea una cuenta gratuita para enviar artículos científicos directamente a tu oncólogo y acceder a muchas más funcionalidades personalizadas.

Regístrate gratis