Molecular and clinical characterization of TIM-3 in glioma through 1,024 samples

Guanzhang Li(Capital Medical University), Zheng Wang(Capital Medical University), Chuanbao Zhang(Capital Medical University), Xing Liu(Capital Medical University), Jinquan Cai(Harbin Medical University), Zhiliang Wang(Capital Medical University), Huimin Hu(Capital Medical University), Fan Wu(Capital Medical University), Zhaoshi Bao(Capital Medical University), Yanwei Liu(Capital Medical University), Liang Zhao(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Tingyu Liang(Capital Medical University), Fan Yang(Capital Medical University), Ruoyu Huang(Capital Medical University), Wei Zhang(Capital Medical University), Tao Jiang(Capital Medical University)
OncoImmunology
July 28, 2017
Cited by 131Open Access
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Abstract

Background: Researches on immunotherapy of glioma has been increasing exponentially in recent years. However, autoimmune-like side effects of current immune checkpoint blockade hindered the clinical application of immunotherapy in glioma. The discovery of the TIM-3, a tumor-specific immune checkpoint, has shed a new light on solution of this dilemma. We aimed at investigating the role of TIM-3 at transcriptome level and its relationship with clinical practice in glioma.Methods: A cohort of 325 glioma patients with RNA-seq data from Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas (CGGA project) was analyzed, and the results were well validated in TCGA RNA-seq data of 699 gliomas. R language was used as the main tool for statistical analysis and graphical work.Results: TIM-3 was enriched in glioblastoma (the most malignant glioma) and IDH-wildtype glioma. TIM-3 can act as a potential marker for mesenchymal molecular subtype according to TCGA transcriptional classification scheme in glioma. TIM-3 was closely related to immune functions in glioma, especially T cell mediated immune response to tumor cell and T cell mediated cytotoxicity directed against tumor cell target. Moreover, TIM-3 and PD-L1 played almost exactly the same inflammatory activation functions in glioma. Clinically, high expression of TIM-3 was an independent indicator of poor prognosis.Conclusion: The expression of TIM-3 is closely related to the pathology and molecular pathology of glioma. Meanwhile, in glioma TIM-3 plays a specific role in T cell tumor immune response. Therefore, TIM-3 is a promising target for immunotherapeutic strategies, providing an alternative treatment when glioma gains resistance to antibodies of PD-1/PD-L1.


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