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Diverse regulated cell death modes predict the immune microenvironment and drug sensitivity in lung adenocarcinoma.

Liting YouZhaodan XinXiaohan ZhouFeifei NaJuan ZhouBinwu Ying
Published in: Journal of cellular physiology (2023)
Integrated action modes of regulated cell death (RCD) in lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) have not been comprehensively dissected. Here, we adopted 15 RCD modes, including 1350 related genes, and established RCD signature scores. We found that LUAD patients with high RCD scores had a significantly worse prognosis in all four different cohorts (TCGA, KM-plotter, GSE31210, and GSE30219). Our nomogram established based on the RCD score and clinical characteristics performed well in both the discovery and validation sets. There was a close correlation between the RCD scores and LUAD molecular subtypes identified by unsupervised consensus clustering. Furthermore, we profiled the tumor microenvironment via deconvolution and found significant differences in immune activity, transcription factor activity and molecular pathway enrichment between the RCD-high and RCD-low groups. More importantly, we revealed that the regulation of antigen presentation is the crucial mechanism underlying RCD. In addition, higher RCD scores predict poorer sensitivity to multiple therapeutic drugs, which indicates that RCD scores may serve as a promising predictor of chemotherapy and immunotherapy outcomes. In summary, this work is the first to reveal the internal links between RCD modes, LUAD, and cancer immunity and highlights the necessity of RCD scores in personalizing treatment plans.
Keyphrases
  • cell death
  • transcription factor
  • stem cells
  • single cell
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • adipose tissue
  • type diabetes
  • young adults
  • dna methylation
  • rna seq
  • health insurance