| Literature DB >> 34568003 |
Naixin Liang1, Lei Liu1, Cheng Huang1, Hongsheng Liu1, Chao Guo1, Ji Li2, Weiwei Wang1, Nan Li3, Rui Lin3, Tao Wang3, Lieming Ding4, Li Mao4, Shanqing Li1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Thymic epithelial tumors (TETs) are malignancies arising from the epithelium of the thymic gland, rare but with relatively favorable prognosis. TETs have different pathological subtypes: thymomas and thymic carcinoma, and they show different clinical characteristics regarding prognosis, pathology, and molecular profiles, etc. Although some studies have investigated the pathogenesis of TETs, more molecular data is still needed to further understand the underlying mechanisms among different TETs subtypes and populations.Entities:
Keywords: PD-L1; RNA-seq; next-generation sequencing; thymic epithelial tumor; thymoma
Year: 2021 PMID: 34568003 PMCID: PMC8456088 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.647512
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Clinical characteristics of the 27 thymic epithelial tumor (TET) patients.
| Characteristic | All (n=27) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Median | 53 |
| Range | 25-70 |
|
| |
| Male | 12 (44%) |
| Female | 15 (56%) |
|
| |
| Asian | 27 (100%) |
|
| |
| A | 2 (7.4%) |
| AB | 6 (22.2%) |
| B1 | 4 (14.8%) |
| B2 | 7 (25.9%) |
| B3 | 5 (18.5%) |
| TC | 3 (11.1%) |
|
| |
| I | 13 (48.2%) |
| II | 5 (18.5%) |
| III | 9 (33.3%) |
|
| |
| I | 13 (48.2%) |
| II | 5 (18.5%) |
| IIIA | 8 (29.6%) |
| IIIB | 1 (3.7%) |
Figure 1Mutational landscape of the 27 patients with thymoma or thymic carcinoma. The percentages in the left showing the frequency of each gene mutated in the cohort. The bottom of the figure shows pathological types of each sample. Type B contains all B subtypes, including B1, B2 and B3. The top of the figure shows mutational burden for each sample, red for synonymous mutations and blue for non-synonymous mutations.
Figure 2Expression profile clustering of thymoma and thymic carcinoma. (A) Five clusters were established. C1-C5, different clusters; P, patient; MG, myasthenia gravis. (B) Gene function differences between thymic epithelial tumor types. Cluster-based differential expression analysis was performed. Four splits were used to separate the five clusters. Numbers besides the cluster boxes represent numbers of highly expressed genes.
Figure 3Representative genes highly expressed in different clusters. (A) EHF; (B) CLDN4; (C) E2F8; (D) FGF7; (E) FGF10; (F) CD274 (PD-L1). The cluster name on X-axis uses the histologic type corresponding to the expression profiling cluster. The matches of dominant pathological subtype and RNA-seq clusters are: A, B3 subtypes - C1, AB subtypes - C2, TC subtypes - C3, B2, B3 subtypes - C4, and B1, B2 subtypes - C5. P-values were calculated using Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon test. FPKM stands for fragment per kilo exon per million reads.
Figure 4PD-L1 IHC staining for B2 and B3 samples in the cluster C4. Top, hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of the tissues. Bottom, IHC staining of PD-L1 in the cells using antibody 22C3 (Dako). Brown cells are PD-L1 staining cells. The H&E staining was used to estimate the tumor cell percentage (TCP). The expression level of PD-L1 protein is determined by the tumor proportion score (TPS), which is further divided into three types: ‘High expression’ (TPS ≥ 50%), ‘Positive’ (1% ≤ TPS < 50%) and ‘Negative’ (TPS < 1%).