Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2023)

Optimal combination of MYCN differential gene and cellular senescence gene predicts adverse outcomes in patients with neuroblastoma

  • Jiaxiong Tan,
  • Jiaxiong Tan,
  • Jiaxiong Tan,
  • Chaoyu Wang,
  • Chaoyu Wang,
  • Chaoyu Wang,
  • Yan Jin,
  • Yan Jin,
  • Yan Jin,
  • Yan Jin,
  • Yuren Xia,
  • Yuren Xia,
  • Yuren Xia,
  • Baocheng Gong,
  • Baocheng Gong,
  • Baocheng Gong,
  • Qiang Zhao,
  • Qiang Zhao,
  • Qiang Zhao,
  • Qiang Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1309138
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionNeuroblastoma (NB) is a common extracranial tumor in children and is highly heterogeneous. The factors influencing the prognosis of NB are not simple.MethodsTo investigate the effect of cell senescence on the prognosis of NB and tumor immune microenvironment, 498 samples of NB patients and 307 cellular senescence-related genes were used to construct a prediction signature.ResultsA signature based on six optimal candidate genes (TP53, IL-7, PDGFRA, S100B, DLL3, and TP63) was successfully constructed and proved to have good prognostic ability. Through verification, the signature had more advantages than the gene expression level alone in evaluating prognosis was found. Further T cell phenotype analysis displayed that exhausted phenotype PD-1 and senescence-related phenotype CD244 were highly expressed in CD8+ T cell in MYCN-amplified group with higher risk-score.ConclusionA signature constructed the six MYCN-amplified differential genes and aging-related genes can be used to predict the prognosis of NB better than using each high-risk gene individually and to evaluate immunosuppressed and aging tumor microenvironment.

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