Pan-cancer analysis reveals context-dependent roles of LINE-1 ORF1p in immune regulation and copy number alterations

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

L1 comprises 17% of the human genome, with 50-150 full-length sequences capable of retrotransposition. Although largely inactive in normal somatic tissues, tumorigenesis leads to L1 derepression and overexpression of its RNA binding chaperone protein, ORF1p. A potential cancer biomarker, ORF1p expression is a hallmark of multiple cancers and an early event in precursor lesions. Our study provides a comprehensive pan-cancer analysis of ORF1p using CPTAC proteogenomic data, revealing a dichotomous role in modulating immune responses. Integrated analyses and supervised learning models divide ORF1p-high tumors into two groups: (1) high ORF1p associates with immunosuppression, reduced interferon signaling and diminished immune cell infiltration (HNSCC and LSCC), and (2) ORF1p-high tumors associate with immune activation (UCEC). Linear regression models reveal that cancer-specific aneuploidies may underlie this immune dichotomy, highlighting the prognostic significance of ORF1p and informing new strategies to leverage detection of plasma-circulating ORF1p to enhance immunotherapeutic efficacy in different tumor contexts.

Article activity feed