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Multi-omic Characterization of Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma Relates CXCR4 mRNA Expression Levels to Potential Clinical Targets

Authors :
Florian Kocher
Alberto Puccini
Gerold Untergasser
Agnieszka Martowicz
Kai Zimmer
Andreas Pircher
Yasmine Baca
Joanne Xiu
Johannes Haybaeck
Piotr Tymoszuk
Richard M. Goldberg
Angelica Petrillo
Anthony F. Shields
Mohamed E. Salem
John L. Marshall
Michael Hall
W. Michael Korn
Chadi Nabhan
Francesca Battaglin
Heinz-Josef Lenz
Emil Lou
Su-Pin Choo
Chee-Keong Toh
Silvia Gasteiger
Renate Pichler
Dominik Wolf
Andreas Seeber
Source :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. 28(22)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose: Chemokines are essential for immune cell trafficking and are considered to have a major impact on the composition of the tumor microenvironment. CX-chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) is associated with poor differentiation, metastasis, and prognosis in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). This study provides a comprehensive molecular portrait of PDAC according to CXCR4 mRNA expression levels. Experimental Design: The Cancer Genome Atlas database was used to explore molecular and immunologic features associated with CXCR4 mRNA expression in PDAC. A large real-word dataset (n = 3,647) served for validation and further exploratory analyses. Single-cell RNA analyses on a publicly available dataset and in-house multiplex immunofluorescence (mIF) experiments were performed to elaborate cellular localization of CXCR4. Results: High CXCR4 mRNA expression (CXCR4high) was associated with increased infiltration of regulatory T cells, CD8+ T cells, and macrophages, and upregulation of several immune-related genes, including immune checkpoint transcripts (e.g., TIGIT, CD274, PDCD1). Analysis of the validation cohort confirmed the CXCR4-dependent immunologic TME composition in PDAC irrespective of microsatellite instability–high/mismatch repair–deficient or tumor mutational burden. Single-cell RNA analysis and mIF revealed that CXCR4 was mainly expressed by macrophages and T-cell subsets. Clinical relevance of our finding is supported by an improved survival of CXCR4high PDAC. Conclusions: High intratumoral CXCR4 mRNA expression is linked to a T cell– and macrophage-rich PDAC phenotype with high expression of inhibitory immune checkpoints. Thus, our findings might serve as a rationale to investigate CXCR4 as a predictive biomarker in patients with PDAC undergoing immune checkpoint inhibition.

Details

ISSN :
15573265
Volume :
28
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....322392014118df10bb058f76498a71ba