Cancer stemness, intratumoral heterogeneity, and immune response across cancers
University of British Columbia · BC Children's Hospital · +8 more institutions
Abstract
Regulatory programs that control the function of stem cells are active in cancer and confer properties that promote progression and therapy resistance. However, the impact of a stem cell-like tumor phenotype ("stemness") on the immunological properties of cancer has not been systematically explored. Using gene-expression-based metrics, we evaluated the association of stemness with immune cell infiltration and genomic, transcriptomic, and clinical parameters across 21 solid cancers. We found pervasive negative associations between cancer stemness and anticancer immunity. This occurred despite high stemness cancers exhibiting increased mutation load, cancer-testis antigen expression, and intratumoral…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.11
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 73
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Immune system
- Cancer
- Biology
- Cancer research
- Medicine
- Oncology
- Immunology
- Internal medicine
- No poverty