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- Title
Tracking the evolution of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma under dynamic immune selection by multi-omics sequencing.
- Authors
Cui, Sijia; McGranahan, Nicholas; Gao, Jing; Chen, Peng; Jiang, Wei; Yang, Lingrong; Ma, Li; Liao, Junfang; Xie, Tian; Xie, Congying; Enver, Tariq; Wu, Shixiu
- Abstract
Intratumoral heterogeneity (ITH) has been linked to decreased efficacy of clinical treatments. However, although genomic ITH has been characterized in genetic, transcriptomic and epigenetic alterations are hallmarks of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC), the extent to which these are heterogeneous in ESCC has not been explored in a unified framework. Further, the extent to which tumor-infiltrated T lymphocytes are directed against cancer cells, but how the immune infiltration acts as a selective force to shape the clonal evolution of ESCC is unclear. In this study, we perform multi-omic sequencing on 186 samples from 36 primary ESCC patients. Through multi-omics analyses, it is discovered that genomic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic ITH are underpinned by ongoing chromosomal instability. Based on the RNA-seq data, we observe diverse levels of immune infiltrate across different tumor sites from the same tumor. We reveal genetic mechanisms of neoantigen evasion under distinct selection pressure from the diverse immune microenvironment. Overall, our work offers an avenue of dissecting the complex contribution of the multi-omics level to the ITH in ESCC and thereby enhances the development of clinical therapy. It is essential to understand heterogeneity and evolution at different omics levels in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). Here, the authors use multi-omics to analyse heterogeneity and evolution in ESCC patient samples, and characterise the levels of immune infiltration as well as selective pressure from the tumour microenvironment.
- Subjects
SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma; MULTIOMICS; TUMOR microenvironment
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2023, Vol 14, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-36558-1