Ruiheng Wang, Guijun Liu, Ke Wang, Zhanglei Pan, Zhihua Pei, Xijiao Hu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: A hypoxic metabolism environment in the tumors is often associated with poor prognostic events such as tumor progression and treatment resistance. In gastric cancer, the mechanism of how hypoxia metabolism affects the tumor microenvironment and immunotherapy efficacy remains to be elucidated.
Methods: We used the bulk-mapping method to analyze the signatures correlated with the response of immunotherapy in the single-cell dataset. Cellular, pathway, and gene were systematically analyzed in both single-cell and bulk validation datasets.
Results: The most significant cell proportion difference between the response and non-response groups was in endothelial cells, which represent the malignant cells. VWF was specifically overexpressed in endothelial cells and was the hub gene of differential genes. EPAS1 was a VWF trans-regulated gene and highly positively correlated with VWF in expression. Knockdown experiments demonstrated that siVWF reduced the expression of VWF, EPAS1, and HIF1A, as well as the synthesis of lactate and adenosine which are indicators of hypoxic metabolism. These results suggest that the overexpression of core malign endothelial genes such as VWF drives hypoxic metabolism in tumors and creates an immunosuppressive environment that reduces the efficacy of immunotherapy. The adverse prognosis of the hypoxia signature was validated in the bulk cohort and significance was further enhanced after selecting core genes and combined survival weight scoring.
Conclusion: In summary, high expression of the malignant endothelial cell driver genes VWF and EPAS1 enhances hypoxic metabolism, and malignant cell-immune cell interactions suppress the immune response. Therefore, the two core genes of hypoxic metabolism might represent potential therapeutic and predicting biomarkers for immunotherapy of gastric cancer in the future.
期刊介绍:
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology is a broad-scope, interdisciplinary open-access journal, focusing on the fundamental processes of life, led by Prof Amanda Fisher and supported by a geographically diverse, high-quality editorial board.
The journal welcomes submissions on a wide spectrum of cell and developmental biology, covering intracellular and extracellular dynamics, with sections focusing on signaling, adhesion, migration, cell death and survival and membrane trafficking. Additionally, the journal offers sections dedicated to the cutting edge of fundamental and translational research in molecular medicine and stem cell biology.
With a collaborative, rigorous and transparent peer-review, the journal produces the highest scientific quality in both fundamental and applied research, and advanced article level metrics measure the real-time impact and influence of each publication.