Bioinformatics Seminars

Bioinformatics Seminar

Time: 11AM
Venue: Zoom Webinar

3 August 2021

The ratio of exhausted to resident infiltrating lymphocytes is prognostic for colorectal cancer patient outcome

Momeneh (Sepideh) Foroutan
Monash University

Immunotherapy success in colorectal cancer (CRC) is mainly limited to patients whose tumors exhibit high microsatellite instability (MSI). However, there is variability in treatment outcomes within this group, which is in part driven by the frequency and characteristics of tumor infiltrating immune cells. Indeed, the presence of specific infiltrating immune cell subsets has been shown to correlate with immunotherapy responses and is in many cases prognostic of treatment outcome.

Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) can undergo distinct differentiation programs, acquiring features of tissue-residency or exhaustion, a process during which T cells upregulate inhibitory receptors such as PD-1 and lose functionality. While residency and exhaustion programs of CD8 T cells are relatively well-studied, these programs have only recently been appreciated in CD4 T cells and remain largely unknown in tumor-infiltrating natural killer (NK) cells.

In this study, we use single cell RNA-seq data to identify signatures of residency and exhaustion in CRC infiltrating lymphocytes, including CD8, CD4 and NK cells. We then test these signatures in independent single cell data from tumor and normal tissue infiltrating immune cells. Further, we use versions of these signatures designed for bulk RNA-seq data to explore tumor intrinsic mutations associated with residency and exhaustion from TCGA data. Finally, using two independent transcriptomic data sets from patients with colon adenocarcinoma, we show that combinations of these signatures, in particular combinations of NK activity signatures, together with tumor-associated signatures, such as TGFbeta signaling, are associated with distinct survival outcomes in colorectal cancer patients.


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