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Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Tumors in children and young adults are rare and diagnostically distinct from those occurring in older patients. They frequently arise from developing cells, resembling stem cells, which may explain some of the clinical and biologic differences observed. The aim of this retrospective...

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Autores principales: Stahl, David, Knoll, Rainer, Gentles, Andrew J., Vokuhl, Christian, Buness, Andreas, Gütgemann, Ines
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7922568/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33670534
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13040854
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author Stahl, David
Knoll, Rainer
Gentles, Andrew J.
Vokuhl, Christian
Buness, Andreas
Gütgemann, Ines
author_facet Stahl, David
Knoll, Rainer
Gentles, Andrew J.
Vokuhl, Christian
Buness, Andreas
Gütgemann, Ines
author_sort Stahl, David
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Tumors in children and young adults are rare and diagnostically distinct from those occurring in older patients. They frequently arise from developing cells, resembling stem cells, which may explain some of the clinical and biologic differences observed. The aim of this retrospective transcriptome study was to investigate the prognostic landscape, immune tumor microenvironment (TME) and stemness in a cohort of 4068 transcriptomes of such tumors. We find that patients’ prognosis correlates with distinct gene expression patterns similar to adult tumor types. Stemness defined by a computational stemness score (mRNAsi) correlates with clinical and molecular parameters that is distinct for each tumor type. In Wilms tumors that recapitulate normal kidney development microscopically, stemness correlates with distinct patterns of immune cell infiltration by transcriptome analysis and by cell localization in tumor tissue. ABSTRACT: Pediatric tumors frequently arise from embryonal cells, often displaying a stem cell-like (“small round blue”) morphology in tissue sections. Because recently “stemness” has been associated with a poor immune response in tumors, we investigated the association of prognostic gene expression, stemness and the immune microenvironment systematically using transcriptomes of 4068 tumors occurring mostly at the pediatric and young adult age. While the prognostic landscape of gene expression (PRECOG) and infiltrating immune cell types (CIBERSORT) is similar to that of tumor entities occurring mainly in adults, the patterns are distinct for each diagnostic entity. A high stemness score (mRNAsi) correlates with clinical and morphologic subtype in Wilms tumors, neuroblastomas, synovial sarcomas, atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors and germ cell tumors. In neuroblastomas, a high mRNAsi is associated with shortened overall survival. In Wilms tumors a high mRNAsi correlates with blastemal morphology, whereas tumors with predominant epithelial or stromal differentiation have a low mRNAsi and a high percentage of M2 type macrophages. This could be validated in Wilms tumor tissue (n = 78). Here, blastemal areas are low in M2 macrophage infiltrates, while nearby stromal differentiated areas contain abundant M2 macrophages, suggesting local microanatomic regulation of the immune response.
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spelling pubmed-79225682021-03-03 Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors Stahl, David Knoll, Rainer Gentles, Andrew J. Vokuhl, Christian Buness, Andreas Gütgemann, Ines Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Tumors in children and young adults are rare and diagnostically distinct from those occurring in older patients. They frequently arise from developing cells, resembling stem cells, which may explain some of the clinical and biologic differences observed. The aim of this retrospective transcriptome study was to investigate the prognostic landscape, immune tumor microenvironment (TME) and stemness in a cohort of 4068 transcriptomes of such tumors. We find that patients’ prognosis correlates with distinct gene expression patterns similar to adult tumor types. Stemness defined by a computational stemness score (mRNAsi) correlates with clinical and molecular parameters that is distinct for each tumor type. In Wilms tumors that recapitulate normal kidney development microscopically, stemness correlates with distinct patterns of immune cell infiltration by transcriptome analysis and by cell localization in tumor tissue. ABSTRACT: Pediatric tumors frequently arise from embryonal cells, often displaying a stem cell-like (“small round blue”) morphology in tissue sections. Because recently “stemness” has been associated with a poor immune response in tumors, we investigated the association of prognostic gene expression, stemness and the immune microenvironment systematically using transcriptomes of 4068 tumors occurring mostly at the pediatric and young adult age. While the prognostic landscape of gene expression (PRECOG) and infiltrating immune cell types (CIBERSORT) is similar to that of tumor entities occurring mainly in adults, the patterns are distinct for each diagnostic entity. A high stemness score (mRNAsi) correlates with clinical and morphologic subtype in Wilms tumors, neuroblastomas, synovial sarcomas, atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors and germ cell tumors. In neuroblastomas, a high mRNAsi is associated with shortened overall survival. In Wilms tumors a high mRNAsi correlates with blastemal morphology, whereas tumors with predominant epithelial or stromal differentiation have a low mRNAsi and a high percentage of M2 type macrophages. This could be validated in Wilms tumor tissue (n = 78). Here, blastemal areas are low in M2 macrophage infiltrates, while nearby stromal differentiated areas contain abundant M2 macrophages, suggesting local microanatomic regulation of the immune response. MDPI 2021-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7922568/ /pubmed/33670534 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13040854 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Stahl, David
Knoll, Rainer
Gentles, Andrew J.
Vokuhl, Christian
Buness, Andreas
Gütgemann, Ines
Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors
title Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors
title_full Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors
title_fullStr Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors
title_full_unstemmed Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors
title_short Prognostic Gene Expression, Stemness and Immune Microenvironment in Pediatric Tumors
title_sort prognostic gene expression, stemness and immune microenvironment in pediatric tumors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7922568/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33670534
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13040854
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