Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences (Aug 2021)

Molecular and Clinical Characterization of LIGHT/TNFSF14 Expression at Transcriptional Level via 998 Samples With Brain Glioma

  • Ying Yang,
  • Wen Lv,
  • Shihai Xu,
  • Fei Shi,
  • Aijun Shan,
  • Jin Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2021.567327
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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LIGHT, also termed TNFSF14, has been reported to play a vital role in different tumors. However, its role in glioma remains unknown. This study is aimed at unveiling the characterization of the transcriptional expression profiling of LIGHT in glioma. We selected 301 glioma patients with mRNA microarray data from the CGGA dataset and 697 glioma patients with RNAseq data from the TCGA dataset. Transcriptome data and clinical data of 998 samples were analyzed. Statistical analyses and figure generation were performed with R language. LIGHT expression showed a positive correlation with WHO grade of glioma. LIGHT was significantly increased in mesenchymal molecular subtype. Gene Ontology analysis demonstrated that LIGHT was profoundly involved in immune response. Moreover, LIGHT was found to be synergistic with various immune checkpoint members, especially HVEM, PD1/PD-L1 pathway, TIM3, and B7-H3. To get further understanding of LIGHT-related immune response, we put LIGHT together with seven immune signatures into GSVA and found that LIGHT was particularly correlated with HCK, LCK, and MHC-II in both datasets, suggesting a robust correlation between LIGHT and activities of macrophages, T-cells, and antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Finally, higher LIGHT indicated significantly shorter survival for glioma patients. Cox regression models revealed that LIGHT expression was an independent variable for predicting survival. In conclusion, LIGHT was upregulated in more malignant gliomas including glioblastoma, IDH wildtype, and mesenchymal subtype. LIGHT was mainly involved in the immune function of macrophages, T cells, and APCs and served as an independent prognosticator in glioma.

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