Frontiers in Immunology (Dec 2022)

A pan-cancer and single-cell sequencing analysis of CD161, a promising onco-immunological biomarker in tumor microenvironment and immunotherapy

  • He Li,
  • Ke Zhou,
  • Kaiyue Wang,
  • Kaiyue Wang,
  • Kaiyue Wang,
  • Hui Cao,
  • Hui Cao,
  • Wantao Wu,
  • Wantao Wu,
  • Zeyu Wang,
  • Zeyu Wang,
  • Ziyu Dai,
  • Ziyu Dai,
  • Shi Chen,
  • Yun Peng,
  • Yun Peng,
  • Yun Peng,
  • Gelei Xiao,
  • Gelei Xiao,
  • Peng Luo,
  • Jian Zhang,
  • Zaoqu Liu,
  • Quan Cheng,
  • Quan Cheng,
  • Hao Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1040289
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundCD161 has been linked to the appearance and development of various cancers.MethodsThe mutation map and the variation of CNVs and SNVs of CD161 were displayed according to cBioportal and GSCALite. We also evaluated the pathway enrichment and drug sensitivity of CD161 according to GSCALite. We performed a single-cell sequencing analysis of cancer cells and T cells in melanoma. The cell communication patterns related to CD161 were further explored. Multiplex immunofluorescence staining of tissue microarrays was used to detect the association between CD161 expression and macrophages and T cells.ResultsA high CD161 level was related to neoantigens expression, pathway enrichment, and drug sensitivity. In addition, single-cell sequencing analysis showed that CD161 was mainly expressed in T cells, M1 and M2 Macrophages, neoplastic, microglial cells, neurons, and cancer cells in many tumor types. Further study on pseudotime trajectories and functional annotation of CD161 proved the critical role of CD161 in tumor progression and T cell immunity in melanoma. Multiplex immunofluorescence revealed that CD161 is closely correlated with the immune infiltration of T cells and macrophages in multiple cancers. In addition, high CD161 expression predicted a favorable immunotherapy response.ConclusionCD161 is involved in the immune infiltration of T cells and macrophages and might be a promising target for tumor immunotherapy.

Keywords