Abstract

PurposeA significant percentage of colorectal cancer patients proceeds to metastatic disease. We hypothesised that mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymorphisms, generated by the high mtDNA mutation rate of energy-demanding clonal immune cell expansions and assessable in peripheral blood, reflect how efficiently systemic immunity impedes metastasis.Patients and methodsWe studied 44 rectal cancer patients from a population-based prospective biomarker study, given curative-intent neoadjuvant radiation and radical surgery for high-risk tumour stage and followed for metastatic failure. Blood specimens were sampled at the time of diagnosis and analysed for the full-length mtDNA sequence, composition of immune cell subpopulations and damaged serum mtDNA.ResultsWhole blood total mtDNA variant number above the median value for the study cohort, coexisting with an mtDNA non-H haplogroup, was representative for the mtDNA of circulating immune cells and associated with low risk of a metastatic event. Abundant mtDNA variants correlated with proliferating helper T cells and cytotoxic effector T cells in the circulation. Patients without metastatic progression had high relative levels of circulating tumour-targeting effector T cells and, of note, the naïve (LAG-3+) helper T-cell population, with the proportion of LAG-3+ cells inversely correlating with cell-free damaged mtDNA in serum known to cause antagonising inflammation.ConclusionNumerous mtDNA polymorphisms in peripheral blood reflected clonal expansion of circulating helper and cytotoxic T-cell populations in patients without metastatic failure. The statistical associations suggested that patient’s constitutional mtDNA manifests the helper T-cell capacity to mount immunity that controls metastatic susceptibility.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT01816607; registration date: 22 March 2013.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease of high biological complexity [1, 2]

  • Since a deficient immune cell surveillance repertoire is a result of an insufficient clonal expansion of tumour-defeating immune cells, we hypothesised that the energy-demanding antitumour-proficient state may generate mutations in the rapidly replicating mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) that are detectable in a whole blood (WB) specimen at the time of cancer diagnosis

  • We observed that patients with rectal cancer at high risk of systemic dissemination who presented a high number of WB-mtDNA polymorphisms, being representative for the mtDNA of circulating immune cells, had favourable survival without development of metastatic disease after neoadjuvant radiation enabling complete resection of the residual primary tumour

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease of high biological complexity [1, 2]. Tumour-defeating immunity entails the activation of cytotoxic lymphocytes. Protective mechanisms against auto-immunity impede the immune surveillance and create immune tolerance that is manifested within the tumour microenvironment (TME) [3] and frequently exerted as detrimental systemic inflammation [4]. The state of the immune cell metabolism may be a decisive factor in the balance between surveillance, tolerance and inflammation, reflected in the enormous energy demand of activated T cells when exponentially proliferating to mount efficient immunity [5, 6]. The understanding of how T cells incite tumour immunity is limited by the scarce information on the distribution of individual T-cell clones in peripheral blood [7]

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