Biosafety and Health (Aug 2023)

Revealing the roles of TLR7, a nucleic acid sensor for COVID-19 in pan-cancer

  • Zhijian Huang,
  • Yaoxin Gao,
  • Yuanyuan Han,
  • Jingwen Yang,
  • Can Yang,
  • Shixiong Li,
  • Decong Zhou,
  • Qiuyan Huang,
  • Jialiang Yang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
pp. 211 – 226

Abstract

Read online

Recent studies suggested that cancer was a risk factor for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7), a severe acute respiratory syndrome 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus's nucleic acid sensor, was discovered to be aberrantly expressed in many types of cancers. However, its expression pattern across cancers and association with COVID-19 has not been systematically studied. In this study, we proposed a computational framework to comprehensively study the roles of TLR7 in COVID-19 and pan-cancers at genetic, gene expression, protein, epigenetic, and single-cell levels. We found TLR7 mRNA expression was significantly up-regulated in 6 cancer types and down-regulated in 6 cancer types, further validated in the HPA database at the protein level. The genes significantly co-expressed with TLR7 were mainly enriched in the toll-like receptor signaling pathway, endolysosome, and signaling pattern recognition receptor activity. In addition, the abnormal TLR7 expression was associated with Mismatch repair (MMR), microsatellite instability (MSI), tumor mutational burden (TMB) in various cancers. Mined by the ESTIMATE algorithm, the expression of TLR7 was also closely linked to various immune infiltration patterns in pan-cancer, and TLR7 was mainly enriched in macrophages, as revealed by single-cell RNA sequencing. Finally, TLR7 expressions were very sensitive to a few targeted drugs, such as Alectinib and Imiquimod. In conclusion, TLR7 might be essential in the pathogenesis of COVID-19 and cancers.

Keywords