Author:
Ralser Damian J.,Herr Emmanuelle,de Vos Luka,Kulcsár Zsófi,Zarbl Romina,Klümper Niklas,Gielen Gerrit H.,Maas Alexander Philippe,Hoffmann Friederike,Dietrich Jörn,Kuster Pia,Mustea Alexander,Glodde Nicole,Kristiansen Glen,Strieth Sebastian,Landsberg Jennifer,Dietrich Dimo
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Inducible T cell costimulator ICOS is an emerging target in immuno-oncology. The aim of this study was to investigate the epigenetic regulation of ICOS in melanoma by DNA methylation.
Methods
We comprehensively investigate ICOS DNA methylation of specific CpG sites and expression pattern within the melanoma microenvironment with regard to immune correlates, differentiation, clinical outcomes, and immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) response.
Results
Our study revealed a sequence-contextual CpG methylation pattern consistent with an epigenetically regulated gene. We found a cell type-specific methylation pattern and locus-specific correlations and associations of CpG methylation with ICOS mRNA expression, immune infiltration, melanoma differentiation, prognosis, and response to ICB. High ICOS mRNA expression was identified as a surrogate for enriched immune cell infiltration and was associated with favorable overall survival (OS) in non-ICB-treated patients and predicted response and a prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) following ICB therapy initiation. ICOS hypomethylation, however, significantly correlated with poor OS in non-ICB patients but predicted higher response and prolonged PFS and OS in ICB-treated patients. Moreover, we observed cytoplasmic and sporadically nuclear tumor cell-intrinsic ICOS protein expression. Tumor cell-intrinsic ICOS protein and mRNA expression was inducible by pharmacological demethylation with decitabine.
Conclusion
Our study identified ICOS DNA methylation and mRNA expression as promising prognostic and predictive biomarkers for immunotherapy in melanoma and points towards a hitherto undescribed role of ICOS in tumor cells.
Funder
University Medical Center Bonn (UKB) BONFOR program
German Society of Urology
German Cancer Aid
Novartis MAYA Research Initiative 2021
Universitätsklinikum Bonn
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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