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Data from Genetic Mechanisms of Immune Evasion in Colorectal Cancer

Authors :
Ulrike Peters
Shuji Ogino
Antoni Ribas
Charles S. Fuchs
Thomas J. Hudson
Levi A. Garraway
Eric S. Lander
Stacey B. Gabriel
Jesse M. Zaretsky
Syed H. Zaidi
Ming Yu
Catherine J. Wu
David A. Wheeler
Alexander Upfill-Brown
Jennifer Tsoi
Wei Sun
Janet L. Stanford
Sachet Shukla
Brian Shirts
Eve Shinbrot
Daniel Sanghoon Shin
Stephen J. Salipante
Ben J. Raphael
Elleanor H. Quist
Cristina Puig-Saus
Colin C. Pritchard
Matteo Pellegrini
Brian B. Nadel
Dennis J. Montoya
Mark D.M. Leiserson
Paige Krystofinski
Yeon Joo Kim
Jeroen R. Huyghe
Siwen Hu-Lieskovan
Li Hsu
William M. Grady
Milan S. Geybels
Helena Escuin-Ordinas
Charles Connolly
Gabriel Abril-Rodriguez
Katsuhiko Nosho
Teppei Morikawa
Kentaro Inamura
Zhi Rong Qian
Reiko Nishihara
Jonathan A. Nowak
Michael Quist
Xinmeng Jasmine Mu
Tsuyoshi Hamada
Daniel K. Wells
Marios Giannakis
Catherine S. Grasso
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

To understand the genetic drivers of immune recognition and evasion in colorectal cancer, we analyzed 1,211 colorectal cancer primary tumor samples, including 179 classified as microsatellite instability–high (MSI-high). This set includes The Cancer Genome Atlas colorectal cancer cohort of 592 samples, completed and analyzed here. MSI-high, a hypermutated, immunogenic subtype of colorectal cancer, had a high rate of significantly mutated genes in important immune-modulating pathways and in the antigen presentation machinery, including biallelic losses of B2M and HLA genes due to copy-number alterations and copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity. WNT/β-catenin signaling genes were significantly mutated in all colorectal cancer subtypes, and activated WNT/β-catenin signaling was correlated with the absence of T-cell infiltration. This large-scale genomic analysis of colorectal cancer demonstrates that MSI-high cases frequently undergo an immunoediting process that provides them with genetic events allowing immune escape despite high mutational load and frequent lymphocytic infiltration and, furthermore, that colorectal cancer tumors have genetic and methylation events associated with activated WNT signaling and T-cell exclusion.Significance: This multi-omic analysis of 1,211 colorectal cancer primary tumors reveals that it should be possible to better monitor resistance in the 15% of cases that respond to immune blockade therapy and also to use WNT signaling inhibitors to reverse immune exclusion in the 85% of cases that currently do not. Cancer Discov; 8(6); 730–49. ©2018 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 663

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31631a44c2cd18477c853619e7e25189