Author:
Ma Wenjuan,Zhou Ting,Song Mengmeng,Liu Jiaqing,Chen Gang,Zhan Jianhua,Ji Liyan,Luo Fan,Gao Xuan,Li Pansong,Xia Xuefeng,Huang Yan,Zhang Li
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Combined small-cell lung carcinoma (cSCLC) represents a rare subtype of SCLC, the mechanisms governing the evolution of cancer genomes and their impact on the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) within distinct components of cSCLC remain elusive.
Methods
Here, we conducted whole-exome and RNA sequencing on 32 samples from 16 cSCLC cases.
Results
We found striking similarities between two components of cSCLC-LCC/LCNEC (SCLC combined with large-cell carcinoma/neuroendocrine) in terms of tumor mutation burden (TMB), tumor neoantigen burden (TNB), clonality structure, chromosomal instability (CIN), and low levels of immune cell infiltration. In contrast, the two components of cSCLC-ADC/SCC (SCLC combined with adenocarcinoma/squamous-cell carcinoma) exhibited a high level of tumor heterogeneity. Our investigation revealed that cSCLC originated from a monoclonal source, with two potential transformation modes: from SCLC to SCC (mode 1) and from ADC to SCLC (mode 2). Therefore, cSCLC might represent an intermediate state, potentially evolving into another histological tumor morphology through interactions between tumor and TIME surrounding it. Intriguingly, RB1 inactivation emerged as a factor influencing TIME heterogeneity in cSCLC, possibly through neoantigen depletion.
Conclusions
Together, these findings delved into the clonal origin and TIME heterogeneity of different components in cSCLC, shedding new light on the evolutionary processes underlying this enigmatic subtype.
Funder
the Chinese National Natural Science Foundation Project
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC