Abstract

The tumor microenvironment (TME) plays a critical regulatory role in bladder cancer (BLCA) progression and metastasis. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) presents as an essential mechanism of tumor invasion and metastasis. Accumulating pieces of evidence indicated that several microenvironmental factors, including fibroblasts, endothelial, and immune cells, induced EMT in tumor cells. As a hallmark gene of the EMT process, calumenin (CALU) was previously reported to directly impact cancer metastasis. However, the functions and molecular mechanisms of CALU have been rarely reported in BLCA. By multi-omics bioinformatics analysis of 408 TCGA BLCA patients, we demonstrated that CALU was an independent risk factor for BLCA outcome. Subsequently, we verified the correlation of CALU with cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and tumor-infiltrating immune cells. The results suggested a positive correlation of CALU with CAFs, CD8+ T cells and macrophages. Also, CALU was significantly associated with multiple immune checkpoint-related genes, which ultimately influenced patients’ responsiveness to immunotherapy. Further, we found that the impact of CALU on BLCA prognosis might also be correlated with gene mutations and ferroptosis. Finally, we validated the roles of CALU by single-cell RNA sequencing, PCR and immunohistochemistry. In conclusion, we found that CALU affected BLCA prognosis associated with multiple mechanisms, including TME remodeling, gene mutation and ferroptosis. Further studies on CALU may provide new targets for BLCA immunotherapy and precision medicine.

Highlights

  • Urinary bladder cancer (BLCA) is one of the most incident cancers, ranking ninth in prevalence worldwide [1]

  • Our results indicated that CALU expression increased significantly with increasing BLCA grade, progression in stage and TNM classification (Figure 2B)

  • We explored the role of CALU on BLCA and found that CALU correlated with BLCA progression, confirming for the first time that CALU is an adverse factor for BLCA prognosis

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Summary

Introduction

Urinary bladder cancer (BLCA) is one of the most incident cancers, ranking ninth in prevalence worldwide [1]. One-quarter of BLCAs are muscle-invasive bladder cancers (MIBCs), whose incidence and mortality are elevating [3]. The prognosis and treatment for MIBC have not made significant progress until the adventure of immunotherapy for BLCA [5]. A large number of clinical trials currently employing immunotherapeutic agents are a testament to the tremendous advances they have made in BLCA treatment [6]. The effectiveness of immunotherapy in BLCA may be attributed to the large number of immune cells infiltrated within the tumor microenvironment (TME) of BLCA [7, 8]

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