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Cell-autonomous immune gene expression is repressed in pulmonary neuroendocrine cells and small cell lung cancer.

Authors :
Cai, Ling
Liu, Hongyu
Huang, Fang
Fujimoto, Junya
Girard, Luc
Chen, Jun
Li, Yongwen
Zhang, Yu-An
Deb, Dhruba
Stastny, Victor
Pozo, Karine
Kuo, Christin S.
Jia, Gaoxiang
Yang, Chendong
Zou, Wei
Alomar, Adeeb
Huffman, Kenneth
Papari-Zareei, Mahboubeh
Yang, Lin
Drapkin, Benjamin
Source :
Communications Biology; 3/9/2021, Vol. 4 Issue 1, p1-13, 13p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is classified as a high-grade neuroendocrine (NE) tumor, but a subset of SCLC has been termed "variant" due to the loss of NE characteristics. In this study, we computed NE scores for patient-derived SCLC cell lines and xenografts, as well as human tumors. We aligned NE properties with transcription factor-defined molecular subtypes. Then we investigated the different immune phenotypes associated with high and low NE scores. We found repression of immune response genes as a shared feature between classic SCLC and pulmonary neuroendocrine cells of the healthy lung. With loss of NE fate, variant SCLC tumors regain cell-autonomous immune gene expression and exhibit higher tumor-immune interactions. Pan-cancer analysis revealed this NE lineage-specific immune phenotype in other cancers. Additionally, we observed MHC I re-expression in SCLC upon development of chemoresistance. These findings may help guide the design of treatment regimens in SCLC. Ling Cai et al. used transcriptomic profiling data of healthy lung, patient-derived small cell lung cancer cell lines, xenografts, and primary tumors to examine a link between neuroendocrine (NE) signatures and immune gene expression. Their findings suggest that cell-autonomous immune gene repression is a shared feature between healthy and tumor cells of NE lineage and may influence tumor-immune cell interaction and response to immunotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23993642
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Communications Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149152094
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-01842-7