TY - JOUR
T1 - Prognostic role of the innate immune signature CD163 and “eat me” signal calreticulin in clear cell renal cell carcinoma
AU - Anno, Tadatsugu
AU - Tanaka, Nobuyuki
AU - Takamatsu, Kimiharu
AU - Hakozaki, Kyohei
AU - Kufukihara, Ryohei
AU - Baba, Yuto
AU - Takeda, Toshikazu
AU - Matsumoto, Kazuhiro
AU - Morita, Shinya
AU - Kosaka, Takeo
AU - Mikami, Shuji
AU - Nishihara, Hiroshi
AU - Mizuno, Ryuichi
AU - Oya, Mototsugu
N1 - Funding Information:
The present study was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI 21K09411 to T.A.; 19H03792, 21K19414, and 22H03217 to N.T), the Takeda Science Foundation (N.T.), the Kobayashi Foundation for Cancer Research (N.T.), the SGH Foundation for Cancer Research (to N.T.), the Princess Takamatsu Cancer Research Fund (to N.T.), and the Keio Gijuku Academic Development Funds (to N.T.).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - The effects of the innate immune status on patients with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) currently remain unknown. We herein provided more extensive information about the inner landscape of immunobiology of ccRCC. In total, 260 ccRCC samples from three different cohorts consisting of 213 primary tumors and 47 metastases were obtained. We focused on five representative innate immune signatures, CD68, CD163, the “eat me” signal calreticulin, the “don't eat me” signal CD47, and signal regulatory protein α, and examined the role of each signature by quantitative immunohistochemistry. We then conducted an integrated genome mutation analysis by next-generation sequencing. Among the five markers, high CD163 and low calreticulin expression levels were prognostic in ccRCC. The application of a new risk model based on CD163 and calreticulin levels, named the innate immune risk group (high risk: high-CD163/low calreticulin, intermediate risk: high-CD163/high calreticulin or low CD163/low calreticulin, low risk: low-CD163/high calreticulin), enabled the sequential stratification of patient prognosis and malignancy. Although organ-specific differences were observed, metastases appeared to have a higher innate immune risk, particularly in the lungs, with 50% of ccRCC metastases being classified into the high-risk group according to our risk score. An analysis of genomic alterations based on the innate immune risk group revealed that alterations in the TP53/Cell cycle pathway were highly prevalent in high-risk ccRCC patients according to two innate immune signatures CD163 and calreticulin. The present results provide insights into the immune-genomic biology of ccRCC tumors for innate immunity and will contribute to future therapies focused on the innate immune system in solid cancers.
AB - The effects of the innate immune status on patients with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) currently remain unknown. We herein provided more extensive information about the inner landscape of immunobiology of ccRCC. In total, 260 ccRCC samples from three different cohorts consisting of 213 primary tumors and 47 metastases were obtained. We focused on five representative innate immune signatures, CD68, CD163, the “eat me” signal calreticulin, the “don't eat me” signal CD47, and signal regulatory protein α, and examined the role of each signature by quantitative immunohistochemistry. We then conducted an integrated genome mutation analysis by next-generation sequencing. Among the five markers, high CD163 and low calreticulin expression levels were prognostic in ccRCC. The application of a new risk model based on CD163 and calreticulin levels, named the innate immune risk group (high risk: high-CD163/low calreticulin, intermediate risk: high-CD163/high calreticulin or low CD163/low calreticulin, low risk: low-CD163/high calreticulin), enabled the sequential stratification of patient prognosis and malignancy. Although organ-specific differences were observed, metastases appeared to have a higher innate immune risk, particularly in the lungs, with 50% of ccRCC metastases being classified into the high-risk group according to our risk score. An analysis of genomic alterations based on the innate immune risk group revealed that alterations in the TP53/Cell cycle pathway were highly prevalent in high-risk ccRCC patients according to two innate immune signatures CD163 and calreticulin. The present results provide insights into the immune-genomic biology of ccRCC tumors for innate immunity and will contribute to future therapies focused on the innate immune system in solid cancers.
KW - CD163
KW - Calreticulin
KW - Eat me signal
KW - Innate immunity
KW - Kidney cancer
KW - Renal cell carcinoma
KW - Survival
KW - Tumor-associated macrophage
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U2 - 10.1007/s00262-023-03369-8
DO - 10.1007/s00262-023-03369-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 36646952
AN - SCOPUS:85146257783
SN - 0340-7004
VL - 72
SP - 1779
EP - 1788
JO - Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
JF - Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
IS - 6
ER -