Tobacco smoking-associated alterations in the immune microenvironment of squamous cell carcinomas Journal Article


Authors: Desrichard, A.; Kuo, F.; Chowell, D.; Lee, K. W.; Riaz, N.; Wong, R. J.; Chan, T. A.; Morris, L. G. T.
Article Title: Tobacco smoking-associated alterations in the immune microenvironment of squamous cell carcinomas
Abstract: Background: Tobacco smoking creates DNA damage, inducing mutations and potentially altering the tumor immune microenvironment. These types of genetic and immune microenvironment alterations are critical factors known to affect tumor response to immunotherapy. Here we analyze the association between the mutational signature of tobacco smoking, tumor mutational load, and metrics of immune activity in squamous cell carcinomas arising in the head and neck and lung. Methods: Using RNA and DNA sequencing data from The Cancer Genome Atlas head and neck (HNSC; n = 287) and lung (LUSC; n = 130) squamous cell carcinoma data sets and two independent gene expression data sets (HNSC, n = 136; LUSC, n = 75), we examined associations between the mutational smoking signature, mutation count, immune cell infiltration, cytolytic activity, and interferon-gamma signaling. Results: An increasing mutational smoking signature was associated with statistically significantly increased overall mutational load in both HNSC (rho=.33, P = 1.01 x 10(-7)) and LUSC (rho = .49, P = 2.80 x 10(-9)). In HNSC, a higher mutational smoking signature was associated with lower levels of immune infiltration (rho = -.37, P = 1.29 x 10(-10)), cytolytic activity (rho = -.28, P = 4.07 x 10(-6)), and interferon-c pathway signaling (rho = .39, P = 3.20 x 10(-11)). In LUSC, these associations were reversed (rho = .19, P = .03; rho = .20, P = .02; and rho = .18, P = .047, respectively). Differentially expressed genes between smoking-high and smoking-low tumors revealed broad tobacco-induced immunosuppression in HNSC, in contrast to a tumor-inflamed microenvironment in smokers with LUSC. Conclusions: In squamous cell carcinomas, the genetic smoking signature is associated with higher mutational load, but variable effects on tumor immunity can occur, depending on anatomic site. In HNSC, smoking is predominantly immunosuppressive; in LUSC, more pro-inflammatory. Both tumor mutation load and immune microenvironment affect clinical response to immunotherapy. Thus, the mutational smoking signature is likely to have relevance for immunotherapeutic investigation in smoking-associated cancers.
Keywords: gene; lung-cancer; t-cells; head; signatures; copd; mutational; nivolumab; comprehensive genomic characterization; processes; pd-1 blockade
Journal Title: JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Volume: 110
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0027-8874
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2018-12-01
Start Page: 1386
End Page: 1392
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000455209700013
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djy060
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC6292793
PUBMED: 29659925
Notes: Article -- djy060 -- Source: Wos
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  1. Timothy Chan
    317 Chan
  2. Nadeem Riaz
    415 Riaz
  3. Richard J Wong
    412 Wong
  4. Luc Morris
    278 Morris
  5. Ken-Wing   Lee
    8 Lee
  6. Fengshen Kuo
    81 Kuo