Objective: This study applied the public genetic databases high-throughput gene expression omnibus (GEO) database to compare the difference of gene screening between the repeated implantation failure (RIF) patients and women with normal endometrium. This study aims to provide additional information for the diagnosis and treatment in RIF patients through the gene set enrichment analysis and the construction of protein to protein interactions (PPIs) network.
Method: The human endometrial microarray data of RIF and normal control group were obtained from the GEO database provided by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). The analysis and the review of differential gene screening, gene ontology (GO) pathway analysis, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) analysis, and PPIs network construction were carried out.
Result: 273 genes with differential expression, 87 up-regulated and 186 down-regulated genes, were obtained through differential gene analysis. 50 genes with the most significant differential expression fold change were screened for subsequent analysis. KEGG results indicated that the top three related pathways were cancer pathway, MAPK signaling pathway, and homologous recombination pathway when the relevant pathways were sequenced according to the correlation size. GO analysis showed that differentially expressed genes were involved in protein phosphorylation, complement activation, and other biological processes. PPIs analysis demonstrated that targeted genes show high correlation to the endometrial receptivity, including PAEP, CXCL14, HOXB3, CD55, and VEGFA, all were down-regulated in RIF endometrial tissues compared to the control group, and these genes also influenced and regulated each other.
Conclusion: Through public databases and bioinformatics, several factors in endometrial receptivity that affect RIF directly and indirectly were found. In particular, the immune and angiogenesis factors stood out the most. The different genes which regulate the immune response and angiogenesis response may become new targeted treatment for RIF.