Pan-cancer scRNA-seq analysis reveals immunological and diagnostic significance of the peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Yuanhang ZhangXiaorui ZhouYu ZhongXi ChenZeyu LiRui LiPengfei QinShanshan WangJianhua YinShang LiuMiaomiao JiangShiping LiuYong HouShiping LiuLiang WuPublished in: Human molecular genetics (2023)
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) reflect systemic immune response during cancer progression. However, a comprehensive understanding of the composition and function of PBMCs in cancer patients is lacking, and the potential of these features to assist cancer diagnosis is also unclear. Here, the compositional and status differences between cancer patients and healthy donors in PBMCs were investigated by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), involving 262 025 PBMCs from 68 cancer samples and 14 healthy samples. We observed an enhanced activation and differentiation of most immune subsets in cancer patients, along with reduction of naïve T cells, expansion of macrophages, impairment of NK cells and myeloid cells, as well as tumor promotion and immunosuppression. Based on characteristics including differential cell type abundances and/or hub genes identified from weight gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) modules of each major cell type, we applied logistic regression to construct cancer diagnosis models. Furthermore, we found that the above models can distinguish cancer patients and healthy donors with high sensitivity. Our study provided new insights into using the features of PBMCs in non-invasive cancer diagnosis.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- single cell
- squamous cell
- immune response
- network analysis
- genome wide
- body mass index
- dendritic cells
- gene expression
- young adults
- dna methylation
- inflammatory response
- risk assessment
- childhood cancer
- cell death
- peripheral blood
- oxidative stress
- long non coding rna
- weight loss
- binding protein
- genome wide identification