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β-Catenin-mediated immune evasion pathway frequently operates in primary cutaneous melanomas.

Authors :
Nsengimana J
Laye J
Filia A
O'Shea S
Muralidhar S
Poźniak J
Droop A
Chan M
Walker C
Parkinson L
Gascoyne J
Mell T
Polso M
Jewell R
Randerson-Moor J
Cook GP
Bishop DT
Newton-Bishop J
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation [J Clin Invest] 2018 May 01; Vol. 128 (5), pp. 2048-2063. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Apr 16.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Immunotherapy prolongs survival in only a subset of melanoma patients, highlighting the need to better understand the driver tumor microenvironment. We conducted bioinformatic analyses of 703 transcriptomes to probe the immune landscape of primary cutaneous melanomas in a population-ascertained cohort. We identified and validated 6 immunologically distinct subgroups, with the largest having the lowest immune scores and the poorest survival. This poor-prognosis subgroup exhibited expression profiles consistent with β-catenin-mediated failure to recruit CD141+ DCs. A second subgroup displayed an equally bad prognosis when histopathological factors were adjusted for, while 4 others maintained comparable survival profiles. The 6 subgroups were replicated in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) melanomas, where β-catenin signaling was also associated with low immune scores predominantly related to hypomethylation. The survival benefit of high immune scores was strongest in patients with double-WT tumors for BRAF and NRAS, less strong in BRAF-V600 mutants, and absent in NRAS (codons 12, 13, 61) mutants. In summary, we report evidence for a β-catenin-mediated immune evasion in 42% of melanoma primaries overall and in 73% of those with the worst outcome. We further report evidence for an interaction between oncogenic mutations and host response to melanoma, suggesting that patient stratification will improve immunotherapeutic outcomes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1558-8238
Volume :
128
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29664013
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI95351