4.7 Article

A Four-Chemokine Signature Is Associated with a T-cell-Inflamed Phenotype in Primary and Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 8, Pages 1997-2010

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-2803

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (PanCuRx Translational Research Initiative) through Government of Ontario
  2. Wallace McCain Centre for Pancreatic Cancer - Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation
  3. Terry Fox Research Institute
  4. Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute
  5. OICR
  6. Canadian Institutes of Health Research CGSM studentship
  7. European Molecular Biology Organization [ALTF 116-2018]
  8. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation [DEU 1199182 FLF-P]
  9. Lebovic Chair in Hepatobiliary/pancreatic Surgical Oncology
  10. Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Purpose: The molecular drivers of antitumor immunity in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) are poorly understood, posing a major obstacle for the identification of patients potentially amenable for immune-checkpoint blockade or other novel strategies. Here, we explore the association of chemokine expression with effector T-cell infiltration in PDAC. Experimental Design: Discovery cohorts comprised 113 primary resected PDAC and 107 PDAC liver metastases. Validation cohorts comprised 182 PDAC from The Cancer Genome Atlas and 92 PDACs from the Australian International Cancer Genome Consortium. We explored associations between immune cell counts by immunohistochemistry, chemokine expression, and transcriptional hallmarks of antitumor immunity by RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), and mutational burden by whole-genome sequencing. Results: Among all known human chemokines, a coregulated set of four (CCL4, CCL5, CXCL9, and CXCL10) was strongly associated with CD8(+) T-cell infiltration (P < 0.001). Expression of this 4-chemokine signature positively correlated with transcriptional metrics of T-cell activation (ZAP70, ITK, and IL2RB), cytolytic activity (GZMA and PRF1), and immunosuppression (PDL1, PD1, CTLA4, TIM3, TIGIT, LAG3, FASLG, and IDO1). Furthermore, the 4-chemokine signature marked tumors with increased T-cell activation scores (MHC I presentation, T-cell/APC costimulation) and elevated expression of innate immune sensing pathways involved in T-cell priming (STING and NLRP3 inflammasome pathways, BATF3-driven dendritic cells). Importantly, expression of this 4-chemokine signature was consistently indicative of a T-cell-inflamed phenotype across primary PDAC and PDAC liver metastases. Conclusions: A conserved 4-chemokine signature marks resectable and metastatic PDAC tumors with an active antitumor phenotype. This could have implications for the appropriate selection of PDAC patients in immunotherapy trials.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available