Molecular Therapy: Oncology (Dec 2024)
Stratifying hepatocellular carcinoma based on immunophenotypes for immunotherapy response and prognosis
Abstract
Immunotherapy has transformed the management of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but effectiveness varies among patients. This study aimed to identify biomarkers and HCC subtypes responsive to immunotherapy. Patients were classified into Immunity-High (Immunity-H) and Immunity-Low (Immunity-L) subtypes using ssGSEA scores. Prognostic genes were identified through Cox regression, and immune cell infiltration was quantified with TIMER 2.0. Brother of CDO (BOC) expression, analyzed via immunohistochemistry, correlated with immunotherapy responses. Flow cytometry assessed immune cell infiltration relative to BOC levels, while CCK-8 and transwell assays evaluated BOC overexpression’s effects on cell proliferation and invasiveness. Clinically, immunity-H patients had better survival outcomes. Three hub genes—BOC, V-Set and Transmembrane Domain Containing 1 (VSTM1), and PRDM12—were identified as significantly associated with prognosis. Among these, BOC and VSTM1 demonstrated positive correlations with immune cell infiltration. Elevated expression of BOC was found to be predictive of favorable responses to immunotherapy and was associated with enhanced infiltration of T cells, dendritic cells, and B cells in the tumor microenvironment. Conversely, BOC overexpression in liver cancer cell lines led to decreased cell proliferation and invasiveness. This study underscores the prognostic significance of HCC subtypes defined by immunogenomic profiles and identifies BOC as a potential biomarker for immunotherapy selection and outcome prediction.