4.8 Article

Identification of an immune overdrive high-risk subpopulation with aberrant expression of FOXP3 and CTLA4 in colorectal cancer

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ONCOGENE
卷 40, 期 11, 页码 2130-2145

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-021-01677-w

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资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82002550, 81672328, 81972220]
  2. Jiangsu Key Research and Development Plan [BE2019632]
  3. Medical Key Professionals Program of Jiangsu Province [AF052141]
  4. National First-class Discipline Program of Food Science and Technology [JUFSTR20180101]
  5. Wuxi Medical Innovation Team [CXTP003]

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The study comprehensively analyzed the prognostic value of FOXP3 and CTLA4 in colorectal cancer, revealing two distinct survival patterns and a novel high-risk subpopulation. The established FOXP3/CTLA4 molecular subtyping system could guide treatment and management strategies for colorectal cancer and other cancers.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is characterized by a heterogeneous tumor microenvironment (TME) that regulates cancer progression and therapeutic response. Overexpression of FOXP3 and CTLA4 is associated with immunosuppressive TME and poor prognosis in many cancer types. However, opposite results were reported in CRC. Thus, we performed comprehensive analyses to evaluate the exact prognostic value of FOXP3 and CTLA4 in CRC. Here, the expression levels of FOXP3 and CTLA4 were used to construct a subtyping system based on >1200 CRC patients from multiple independent public datasets. We revealed that, in CRC patients with relatively high expression of FOXP3, there exist two different subpopulations with opposite survival patterns according to CLTA4 expression. We further established a method for evaluating all cohorts and identified a novel FOXP3(High)CTLA4(High*) CRC risk subpopulation that accounts for 5-10% of CRC patients. Moreover, different methods of functional enrichment and immune evaluation were used to analyze the TME characteristics of different FOXP3/CTLA4 subtypes. The FOXP3(High)CTLA4(High*) CRC risk subpopulation was characterized by an immune overdrive TME phenotype, including high immune cell infiltration, low tumor purity, high immune checkpoint levels, and TGF-beta activation. Finally, the constructed FOXP3/CTLA4 subtyping system was further validated by quantitative RT-PCR, immunochemistry staining, and multicolor immunofluorescence in an independent CRC cohort we collected. This high-risk subpopulation was also observed in kidney cancers and low-grade glioma patients by a Pan-cancer analysis. Together, our study revealed that the established FOXP3/CTLA4 molecular subtyping system could be used to select treatment and management strategies for CRC and other cancers.

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