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CD48 is a key molecule of immunomodulation affecting prognosis in glioma.

Authors :
Zou, Cunyi
Zhu, Chen
Guan, Gefei
Guo, Qing
Liu, Tianqi
Shen, Shuai
Yan, Zihao
Xu, Xiaoyan
Lin, Zhiguo
Chen, Ling
Wu, Anhua
Cheng, Wen
Source :
OncoTargets & Therapy. May2019, Vol. 12, p4181-4193. 13p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose: Glioma is a refractory disease associated with immune cell infiltration, and the effectiveness of checkpoint blockade remains suboptimal. As an adhesion and costimulatory molecule, CD48 plays a significant role in immunomodulation. As such, studying CD48 may provide additional understanding of the immune and inflammation response of glioma. Methods: Using R language and GraphPad Prism 7, RNA sequencing data of 946 patients from Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas and The Cancer Genome Atlas cohorts were analyzed. Results: CD48 was highly expressed in the malignant progression of glioma. As an independent risk factor, high-CD48 patients were associated with poor prognosis. CD48 influenced glioma purity and the local immune cell subpopulation. CD48 was closely related to immune function in glioma. Patients with an enhanced immune phenotype, high CD48, were associated with immune suppressive molecules and checkpoints. In addition, CD48 correlated with the immune and inflammatory response. A checkpoint risk score including CD48, SLAMF8 and PD-L1 was used to assess the role of checkpoints. Risk score was particularly high in a malignant subtype of glioma and was an independent predictive indicator of unfavorable outcome. Additionally, age, IDH subtype and MGMT promoter status influenced the predictive significance of checkpoint risk score. Conclusion: CD48 exhibits a crucial role in reduced survival and immunomodulation in glioma. In addition, we found that checkpoints play a greater role in patients older than 40 years old with IDH wild-type and MGMT methylated status. These findings suggest that combining CD48 blockade with PD-L1 may be a promising approach to glioma immunotherapy for specific subpopulations of patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11786930
Volume :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
OncoTargets & Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137016614
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S198762