iScience (Oct 2021)

Cancer cell immune mimicry delineates onco-immunologic modulation

  • Rui Gao,
  • Bin He,
  • Qitao Huang,
  • Zifeng Wang,
  • Min Yan,
  • Eric Wing-Fai Lam,
  • Suxia Lin,
  • Bo Wang,
  • Quentin Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 10
p. 103133

Abstract

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Summary: Immune transcripts are essential for depicting onco-immunologic interactions. However, whether cancer cells mimic immune transcripts to reprogram onco-immunologic interaction remains unclear. Here, single-cell transcriptomic analyses of 7,737 normal and 37,476 cancer cells reveal increased immune transcripts in cancer cells. Cells gradually acquire immune transcripts in malignant transformation. Notably, cancer cell-derived immune transcripts contribute to distinct prognoses of immune gene signatures. Optimized immune response signature (oIRS), obtained by excluding cancer-related immune genes from immune gene signatures, and offers a more reliable prognostic value. oIRS reveals that antigen presentation, NK cell killing and T cell signaling are associated with favorable prognosis. Patients with higher oIRS expression are associated with favorable responses to immunotherapy. Indeed, CD83+ cell infiltration, which indicates antigen presentation activity, predicts favorable prognosis in breast cancer. These findings unveil that immune mimicry is a distinct cancer hallmark, providing an example of cancer cell plasticity and a refined view of tumor microenvironment.

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