New software sheds light on cancer’s hidden genetic networks
Universidad de NavarraPeer-Reviewed Publication
Researchers at the University of Navarra in Spain, have developed RNACOREX, a new open-source software tool that reveals hidden genetic regulatory networks involved in cancer and helps predict patient survival. Tested across 13 different tumor types using data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), RNACOREX identifies key interactions between microRNAs and messenger RNAs—molecular relationships that are often missed by conventional analyses.
Unlike many artificial intelligence models that function as “black boxes,” RNACOREX produces interpretable molecular maps that show how genes interact within tumors. These networks can stratify patients according to survival probability with accuracy comparable to advanced AI approaches, while clearly explaining the biological mechanisms behind the predictions.
Published in PLOS Computational Biology, the study demonstrates how RNACOREX can uncover shared molecular patterns across cancers, highlight individual molecules of biomedical interest, and generate new hypotheses about tumor progression. Freely available via GitHub and PyPI, the tool is designed to be accessible for research laboratories worldwide and represents a step forward in explainable AI for precision oncology.
- Funder
- Gobierno de Navarra, ERA PerMed