Research Paper Volume 13, Issue 8 pp 11564—11594
Comprehensive analysis of genomic and immunological profiles in Chinese and Western hepatocellular carcinoma populations
- 1 Department of Plastic and Burns Surgery, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China
- 2 Department of Liver Surgery and Liver Transplantation, State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy and Cancer Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University and Collaborative Innovation Center of Biotherapy, Chengdu 610041, China
Received: October 31, 2020 Accepted: February 3, 2021 Published: April 18, 2021
https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.202853How to Cite
Copyright: © 2021 Li et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
In this study, we explored the genomic and immune cell infiltration profiles among four distinct Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) types. This study included 100 patients (all tumors and adjacent liver tissues received WES sequencing) with HCC from the West China Hospital (WCH) and patients were divided into WCH-HBV-HCC group and WCH-NonHBV-HCC group. Additionally, this study included 106 HBV-related HCC (TCGA-HBV-HCC) and 69 alcoholic HCC (TCGA-Alcol-HCC) patients from the TCGA. We analyzed the high-frequency gene mutation, copy number variation (CNV), mutation spectrum, signatures and immune cell infiltration of these four groups. This study showed significant differences in gene mutation and CNV level among four HCC groups. Compared to genomic level, there is no significant difference between TCGA-HBV-HCC and TCGA-Alcol-HCC groups in fractions of tumor-infiltrating immune cells. According to the status of immune cell infiltration, patients were classified into immune-HIGH, immune-MIX and immune-LOW group, respectively. In the WCH-HBV-HCC and TCGA-HBV-HCC groups, more patients in the Immune-LOW group had TP53 mutation. Except for TP53, neither the other gene mutation nor tumor mutation burden was found to be associated with immune cell infiltration in the WCH-HBV-HCC, TCGA-HBV-HCC and TCGA-Alcol-HCC groups. In the CNV level, we found that samples with low immune infiltrate had higher number of deleted or amplified genes in the TCGA-HBV-HCC and TCGA-Alcol-HCC groups. We found comprehensive genomic heterogeneity among four HCC groups. The total gene CNV level, not the mutational burden of HCC, is associated with immune cell infiltration in HCC. TP53 mutation may injury the immune response of the HBV-related HCC.