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Lung adenocarcinoma manifesting as subsolid nodule potentially represents tumour in the equilibrium phase of immunoediting.

Rongxin XiaoYi MaHao LiXiao LiZewen SunQingyi QiPing YinFan YangMan-Tang Qiu
Published in: Immunology (2022)
Lung adenocarcinomas manifesting as subsolid nodules (SSN-LUADs) possess distinct dormant behaviour. This study was designed to compare the immune landscapes of normal lungs (nLungs), SSN-LUADs and LUADs manifesting as solid nodules (SN-LUADs) so as to better understand the status of anti-tumour immunity in SSN-LUADs. Mass cytometry by time-of-flight analysis was performed on 299, 570 single cells from nLung, SSN-LUAD and SN-LUAD tissues. The immune cells were identified by phenotype, and the percentages of different immune cell subclusters were compared between SSN-LUADs, SN-LUADs and nLungs. Elevated percentage of CD8 + T cells were identified in SSN-LUADs compared with in nLungs and SN-LUADs. Elevated CD56 bright NK cells and decreased CD56 dim NK cells were identified in both SSN-LUADs and SN-LUADs compared with in nLungs. The immune landscape of SSN-LUAD fits the theory of equilibrium phase of immunoediting, thus functional adaptive anti-tumour immunity but impaired innate anti-tumour immunity potentially contributes to the maintaining of its dormant behaviour.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • immune response
  • molecular dynamics
  • single cell
  • molecular dynamics simulations