| Literature DB >> 33589643 |
Mahdi Golkaram1, Michael L Salmans1, Shannon Kaplan1, Raakhee Vijayaraghavan1, Marta Martins2, Nafeesa Khan1, Cassandra Garbutt1, Aaron Wise1, Joyee Yao1, Sandra Casimiro2, Catarina Abreu3, Daniela Macedo3, Ana Lúcia Costa3, Cecília Alvim3, André Mansinho2,3, Pedro Filipe3, Pedro Marques da Costa3,4, Afonso Fernandes2, Paula Borralho4, Cristina Ferreira3, Fernando Aldeia3, João Malaquias3, Jim Godsey1, Alex So1, Traci Pawlowski1, Luis Costa5,6, Shile Zhang7, Li Liu8.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most lethal malignancies. The extreme heterogeneity in survival rate is driving the need for new prognostic biomarkers. Human endogenous retroviruses (hERVs) have been suggested to influence tumor progression, oncogenesis and elicit an immune response. We examined multiple next-generation sequencing (NGS)-derived biomarkers in 114 CRC patients with paired whole-exome and whole-transcriptome sequencing (WES and WTS, respectively). First, we demonstrate that the median expression of hERVs can serve as a potential biomarker for prognosis, relapse, and resistance to chemotherapy in stage II and III CRC. We show that hERV expression and CD8+ tumor-infiltrating T-lymphocytes (TILs) synergistically stratify overall and relapse-free survival (OS and RFS): the median OS of the CD8-/hERV+ subgroup was 29.8 months compared with 37.5 months for other subgroups (HR = 4.4, log-rank P < 0.001). Combing NGS-based biomarkers (hERV/CD8 status) with clinicopathological factors provided a better prediction of patient survival compared to clinicopathological factors alone. Moreover, we explored the association between genomic and transcriptomic features of tumors with high hERV expression and establish this subtype as distinct from previously described consensus molecular subtypes of CRC. Overall, our results underscore a previously unknown role for hERVs in leading to a more aggressive subtype of CRC.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33589643 DOI: 10.1038/s41525-021-00177-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Genom Med ISSN: 2056-7944 Impact factor: 8.617