Cancers (Jul 2022)

Stemness Correlates Inversely with MHC Class I Expression in Pediatric Small Round Blue Cell Tumors

  • Linda Müller,
  • Maik Kschischo,
  • Christian Vokuhl,
  • David Stahl,
  • Ines Gütgemann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 15
p. 3584

Abstract

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Recently, immunotherapeutic approaches have become a feasible option for a subset of pediatric cancer patients. Low MHC class I expression hampers the use of immunotherapies relying on antigen presentation. A well-established stemness score (mRNAsi) was determined using the bulk transcriptomes of 1134 pediatric small round blue cell tumors. Interestingly, MHC class I gene expression (HLA-A/-B/-C) was correlated negatively with mRNAsi throughout all diagnostic entities: neuroblastomas (NB) (n = 88, r = −0.41, p n = 117, r = −0.46, p n = 158, r = −0.5, p n = 224, r = −0.39, p r = −0.49, p n = 76, r = −0.24, p = 0.06). The negative correlation of MHC class I and mRNAsi was independent of clinical features in NB, RMS, and WT. In NB and WT, increased MHC class I was correlated negatively with tumor stage. RMS patients with a high expression of MHC class I and abundant CD8 T cells showed a prolonged overall survival (n = 148, p = 0.004). Possibly, low MHC class I expression and stemness in pediatric tumors are remnants of prenatal tumorigenesis from multipotent precursor cells. Further studies are needed to assess the usefulness of stemness and MHC class I as predictive markers.

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