Evolutionary trajectories of immune escape across cancers
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Immune escape is a critical hallmark of cancer progression and underlies resistance to multiple immunotherapies. However, it remains unclear when the genetic events associated with immune escape occur during cancer development. Here, we integrate functional genomics studies of immunomodulatory genes with a tumor evolution reconstruction approach to infer the evolution of immune escape across 38 cancer types from the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes dataset. Different cancers favor mutations in different immunomodulatory pathways. For example, the antigen presentation machinery is highly mutated in colorectal adenocarcinoma, lung squamous cell carcinoma, and chromophobe renal cell carcinoma, and the protein methylation pathway is highly mutated in bladder transitional cell carcinoma and lung adenocarcinoma. We also observe different timing patterns in multiple immunomodulatory pathways. For instance, mutations impacting genes involved in cellular amino acid metabolism were more likely to happen late in pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Mutations in the glucocorticoid receptor regulatory network pathway tended to occur early, while mutations in the TNF pathways were more likely to occur late in B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Mutations in the NOD1/2 signaling pathway and DNA binding transcription factor activity tended to happen late in breast adenocarcinoma and ovarian adenocarcinoma. Together, these results delineate the evolutionary trajectories of immune escape in different cancer types and highlight opportunities for improved immunotherapy of cancer.
Significance
Despite its critical role in cancer progression, the evolution of immune escape is poorly understood. We integrate functional genomics and tumor evolution reconstruction and infer immune escape trajectories across cancer types. Our results have important implications for developing biomarkers for immunoprevention and treatment strategies for immune escape of cancer.