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PMEL as a Prognostic Biomarker and Negatively Associated With Immune Infiltration in Skin Cutaneous Melanoma (SKCM)
Author(s) -
Shuguang Zhang,
Kun Chen,
Huanmei Liu,
Changyou Jing,
Xinxin Zhang,
Chunfeng Qu,
Shichong Yu
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of immunotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.805
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1537-4513
pISSN - 1524-9557
DOI - 10.1097/cji.0000000000000374
Subject(s) - immune system , melanoma , cancer research , gene expression profiling , immunotherapy , biology , immunology , medicine , gene expression , gene , genetics
Premelanosome protein (PMEL) is crucial for the formation of melanosomal fibrils through the transition from stage I to stage II melanosomes. It was used as a target antigen in some adoptive T-cell therapy of melanoma. The correlation of PMEL to prognosis and immune cell infiltration level are unknown in melanoma. The PMEL expression was evaluated via Tumor Immune Estimation Resource, Oncomine and Gene Expression Profiling Interactive Analysis (GEPIA). We also evaluate the influence of PMEL on overall survival via GEPIA, PrognoScan, and immunohistochemistry in human tissue microarray. The correlation between PMEL expression level and immune cell or gene markers of immune infiltration level was explored on Tumor Immune Estimation Resource and GEPIA. PMEL expression was significantly higher in skin cutaneous melanoma (SKCM) and SKCM-metastasis in comparison with the other cancers. In SKCM, PMEL expression in high levels was associated with poor overall survival. In both SKCM and SKCM-metastasis patients, PMEL expression is negatively correlated with the infiltration cells of CD8+ T cells, macrophages, and neutrophils. Programmed cell-death protein 1 just showed response rates ranging from 20% to 40% in patients with melanoma, so it is critical to discover a new therapeutic target. PMEL is negatively associated with immune cell infiltration and can be as a negative prognosis marker or new immunotherapy target in SKCM and SKCM-metastasis.

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