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IIT-Madras develops tool to detect cancer causing tumours in brain, spinal cord

IIT-Madras develops tool to detect cancer causing tumours in brain, spinal cord
, Tuesday, 2 May 2023 (11:49 IST)
Chennai: The Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT-M) Researchers have developed a Machine Learning-based computational tool for better detection of cancer-causing tumours in the brain and spinal cord.
 
Called ‘GBMDriver’ (GlioBlastoma Mutiforme Drivers), this tool is publicly available online.
 
Glioblastoma is a fast and aggressively growing tumour in the brain and spinal cord. Although there has been research undertaken to understand this tumour, therapeutic options remain limited with an expected survival rate of less than two years from the initial diagnosis, a IIT-M release said.
 
It said it is important to evaluate the functional consequences of variants in proteins, which are involved in Glioblastoma to advance the therapeutic options for patients. However, functional validations to identify driver mutations (disease-causing mutations) from all the observed variants would be strenuous work.
 
The GBMDriver was developed specifically to identify driver mutations and passenger mutations (passenger mutations are neutral mutations) in Glioblastoma.
 
In order to develop this web server, a variety of factors such as amino acid properties, di- and tri-peptide motifs, conservation scores, and Position Specific Scoring Matrices (PSSM) were taken into account.
 
In this study, 9,386 driver mutations and 8728 passenger mutations in glioblastoma were analysed. Driver mutations in glioblastoma were identified with an accuracy of 81.99 percent, in a blind set of 1,809 mutants, which is better than existing computational methods. This method is completely dependent on protein sequence.
 
The research was led by Prof.M.Michael Gromiha, Department of Biotechnology, IIT-Madras. His team included Ms. Medha Pandey, PhD Student, IIT-Madras and two IIT-Madras alumni Dr. P. Anoosha currently in The Ohio State University, Columbus, and Dr. Dhanusha Yesudhas who is now at the National Institute of Health, U.S.
 
Their findings were published in the reputed peer-reviewed journal Briefings in Bioinformatics. (UNI)

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