UALCAN: A Portal for Facilitating Tumor Subgroup Gene Expression and Survival Analyses

Darshan S. Chandrashekar(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Bhuwan Bashel(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Sai Akshaya Hodigere Balasubramanya(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Chad J. Creighton(Baylor College of Medicine), Israel Ponce-Rodriguez(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Balabhadrapatruni V. S. K. Chakravarthi(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Sooryanarayana Varambally(University of Alabama at Birmingham)
Neoplasia
July 18, 2017
Cited by 6,505Open Access
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Abstract

Genomics data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) project has led to the comprehensive molecular characterization of multiple cancer types. The large sample numbers in TCGA offer an excellent opportunity to address questions associated with tumo heterogeneity. Exploration of the data by cancer researchers and clinicians is imperative to unearth novel therapeutic/diagnostic biomarkers. Various computational tools have been developed to aid researchers in carrying out specific TCGA data analyses; however there is need for resources to facilitate the study of gene expression variations and survival associations across tumors. Here, we report UALCAN, an easy to use, interactive web-portal to perform to in-depth analyses of TCGA gene expression data. UALCAN uses TCGA level 3 RNA-seq and clinical data from 31 cancer types. The portal's user-friendly features allow to perform: 1) analyze relative expression of a query gene(s) across tumor and normal samples, as well as in various tumor sub-groups based on individual cancer stages, tumor grade, race, body weight or other clinicopathologic features, 2) estimate the effect of gene expression level and clinicopathologic features on patient survival; and 3) identify the top over- and under-expressed (up and down-regulated) genes in individual cancer types. This resource serves as a platform for in silico validation of target genes and for identifying tumor sub-group specific candidate biomarkers. Thus, UALCAN web-portal could be extremely helpful in accelerating cancer research. UALCAN is publicly available at http://ualcan.path.uab.edu.


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