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SRX24637316: GSM8284987: Lung_11_tumor; Homo sapiens; OTHER
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina NovaSeq 6000) run: 203.4M spots, 40.3G bases, 12.7Gb downloads

External Id: GSM8284987_r1
Submitted by: Zeynep Madak Erdogan, FSHN, UIUC
Study: The effect of exposure to neighborhood violence on GR signaling in lung tumors [Spatial Transcriptomics]
show Abstracthide Abstract
Despite lower rates and intensity of smoking, Black men experience a higher incidence of lung cancer compared to White men. The racial disparity in lung cancer is particularly pronounced in Chicago, a highly segregated urban city. Neighborhood conditions, particularly social stress, may play a role in lung tumorigenesis. Preliminary studies indicate that Black men residing in neighborhoods with higher rates of violent crime have significantly higher levels of hair cortisol, an indicator of stress response. To examine the relationship between social stress exposure and gene expression in lung tumors, we investigated glucocorticoid receptor (GR) binding in lung tumor samples in relation to GR target gene expression levels and zip code level residential neighborhood violence. Spatial transcriptomics and a version of ChIP-sequencing known as CUT & RUN were used. GR recruitment to chromatin was correlated with neighborhood violent crime rate and overall GR binding increased with increasing neighborhood violent crime rates. Among patients residing in high-violence neighborhoods, tumor samples, compared to normal neighboring lung tissue, had fewer GR binding sites. The opposite was seen in patients residing in low-violence neighborhoods, with tumor samples having more GR binding sites when compared to normal lung tissue. Tumor samples from patients living in high-violence neighborhoods exhibited increased GR recruitment to genes associated with greater tumor aggressiveness. Our findings suggest that exposure to neighborhood violence may influence tumor biology via reprogramming GR recruitment. Prioritizing lung cancer screening in neighborhoods with increased social stress, such as high violence, may reduce racial disparities in lung cancer. Overall design: Fifteen lung tumor samples from lung adenocarcinoma patient were analyzed using spatial transcriptomics and ChIP-seq (CUT&RUN)
Sample: Lung_11_tumor
SAMN41480611 • SRS21374403 • All experiments • All runs
Organism: Homo sapiens
Library:
Name: GSM8284987
Instrument: Illumina NovaSeq 6000
Strategy: OTHER
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: other
Layout: PAIRED
Construction protocol: Fresh frozen tissue were OCT embedded, and 10µm frozen sections were cut with cryostat Spatial transcriptome sequencing libraries were prepared with 10x Genomics Visium Spatial Gene Expression Slides & Reagent kit according to manufacturer's construction
Runs: 1 run, 203.4M spots, 40.3G bases, 12.7Gb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR29113453203,436,79240.3G12.7Gb2024-07-10

ID:
32956196

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