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TESC associated with poor prognosis enhances cancer stemness and migratory properties in liver cancer.

Liver cancer stem cells (LCSCs) are responsible for recurrence, metastasis, and drug resistance in liver cancer. However, the genes responsible for inducing LCSCs have not been fully identified. Based on our previous study, we found that tescalcin (TESC), a calcium-binding EF hand protein that plays a crucial role in chromatin remodeling, transcriptional regulation, and epigenetic modifications, was up-regulated in LCSCs of spheroid cultures. By searching the Cancer Genome Atlas, International Cancer Genome Consortium, Human Protein Atlas, and Kaplan-Meier Plotter databases, we found that TESC expression was significantly elevated in liver cancer compared with that in normal liver tissue and was predictive of a decreased overall survival rate. Multivariate Cox analysis revealed TESC to be an independent prognostic factor for survival. High TESC expression was positively associated with cancer stem cell pathways, cancer stem cell surface markers, stemness transcription factors, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) factors, immune checkpoint proteins, and various cancer-related biological processes in liver cancer. Furthermore, TESC was implicated as promoting cancer stem cell properties through its influence on EMT. We demonstrated that TESC is a novel stemness-related gene that can serve as an independent prognostic factor for liver cancer.

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