Abstract
Dysregulated R-loop homeostasis leads to DNA replication stress and genomic instability, a major driver of cancer. However, the role of R-loops in melanoma development remains unclear. We established an R-loop scoring model based on a single-cell RNA sequencing dataset and evaluated the association between the R-loop score with the melanoma immune microenvironment and treatment response. We explored the role of CENPA-mediated changes in R-loop distribution during melanoma progression by DNA/RNA immunoprecipitation and sequencing and a series of functional experiments. We found that malignant cells with high R-loop scores may be involved in melanoma progression by modulating immune evasion, metabolic reprogramming, and cancer-related pathways. A cell communication analysis revealed that high-score R-loops play an important role in altering cell-cell interactions and limiting the CD8 + cytotoxic T cell response and T cell accumulation. CENPA silencing induced changes in R-loop distribution, upregulated Hippo signaling activity, and inhibited tumor cell proliferation and migration. Moreover, the R-loop score can predict the prognosis and immunotherapy effect of melanoma patients. Our work reveals the potential molecular mechanism by which abnormal R-loops promote melanoma progression, which may help develop anticancer therapies based on R-loops or R-loop regulators.
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