Author:
Zhou Yanjun,Qin Xue,Hu Qunchao,Qin Shaolei,Xu Ran,Gu Ke,Lu Hua
Abstract
AbstractDisulfidptosis is a condition where dysregulated NAPDH levels and abnormal accumulation of cystine and other disulfides occur in cells with high SLC7A11 expression under glucose deficiency. This disrupts normal formation of disulfide bonds among cytoskeletal proteins, leading to histone skeleton collapse and triggering cellular apoptosis. However, the correlation between disulfidptosis and immune responses in relation to glioblastoma survival rates and immunotherapy sensitivity remains understudied. Therefore, we utilized The Cancer Genome Atlas and The Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas to identify disulfidptosis-related immune checkpoint genes and established an overall survival (OS) prediction model comprising six genes: CD276, TNFRSF 14, TNFSF14, TNFSF4, CD40, and TNFRSF18, which could also be used for predicting immunotherapy sensitivity. We identified a cohort of glioblastoma patients classified as high-risk, which exhibited an upregulation of angiogenesis, extracellular matrix remodeling, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition as well as an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) enriched with tumor associated macrophages, tumor associated neutrophils, CD8 + T-cell exhaustion. Immunohistochemical staining of CD276 in 144 cases further validated its negative correlation with OS in glioma. Disulfidptosis has the potential to induce chronic inflammation and an immunosuppressive TME in glioblastoma.
Funder
Wuxi Taihu Talent Medical and Health Care Project
Wuxi Translational Medicine Research Institute
Wuxi Municipal Health Commission General Project
Wuxi Municipal Health Commission Youth Project
Wuxi Taihu Lake Talent Plan, Supports for Leading Talents in Medical and Health Profession, Project Plan of Wuxi Institute of Translational Medicine
Scientific Research Project of Wuxi Commission of Health
Maternal and Child Health Research Project of Jiangsu Commission of Health
Scientific Research Project of Jiangsu Maternal and Child Health Association
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC