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
Summary
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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