TY - JOUR T1 - <em>Chameleon</em> microRNAs in breast cancer: their elusive role as regulatory factors in cancer progression JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2020.12.15.422846 SP - 2020.12.15.422846 AU - Cesare Miglioli AU - Gaetan Bakalli AU - Samuel Orso AU - Mucyo Karemera AU - Roberto Molinari AU - Stéphane Guerrier AU - Nabil Mili Y1 - 2020/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/12/15/2020.12.15.422846.abstract N2 - Breast cancer is one of the most frequent cancers affecting women. Non-coding micro RNAs (miRNAs) seem to play an important role in the regulation of pathways involved in tumor occurrence and progression. Extending on the research in Haakensen et al., where significant miRNAs were selected as being associated with the progression from normal breast tissue to breast cancer, in this work we put forward 112 sets of miRNA combinations, each including at most 5 expressions with high accuracy in discriminating healthy breast tissue from breast carcinoma. Our results are based on a recently developed machine learning technique which, instead of selecting a single model (or combination of features), delivers a set of models with equivalent predictive capabilities that allow to interpret and visualize the interaction of these features. These results shed new light on the biological action of the selected miRNAs which can behave in different ways according to the miRNA network with which they interact.Indeed, these revealed connections may contribute to explain why, in some cases, different studies attribute opposite functions to the same miRNA. It is therefore possible to understand how the role of a genomic variable may change when considered in interaction with other sets of variables, as opposed to only considering its effect when it is evaluated within a unique combination of features. The approach proposed in this work provides a statistical basis for the notion of chameleon miRNAs and is inspired by the emerging field of systems biology.Author SummaryThe notion of a single predictive genomic (statistical) model is replaced by that of a set of models that can be considered as exchangeable due to their indistinguishable (optimal) predictive abilities;Our results indicate that the role of miRNAs cannot be interpreted independently from the combination of features with which they interact and can therefore vary considerably when considered in a network of different combinations. Some miRNAs may act as chameleons and behave in opposite manners thereby showing some kind of antagonistic duality;Some miRNAs are exchangeable inside models with equivalent predictive ability and seem to point to latent biological functions. ER -