Integrating bulk and single-cell sequencing reveals cellular heterogeneity between lung adenocarcinoma in smokers and never-smokers
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Zihuan Zhao,
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Pan Yang,
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Yuhan Liu,
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Kai Wang,
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Xianfeng Xu,
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Yuzhuo Wang,
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Meng Zhu,
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Na Qin,
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Cheng Wang,
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Weimin Li,
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Hongxia Ma,
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Zhoufeng Wang,
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Hongbing Shen
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Abstract
Lung cancer in smokers (LCIS) and lung cancer in never-smokers (LCINS) are different entities with distinct molecular features. However, their cellular heterogeneity still requires further investigation. Through an integrated analysis of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and bulk sequencing data, we identified cell subpopulations associated with smoking and non-smoking patients. Downstream transcriptomic analyses were then performed to reveal differences in cell function and tumor microenvironment. We observed that smoking-associated cancer cells exhibited a higher degree of aggressiveness, which may correlate with an adverse prognosis in smoking patients. Additionally, immunosuppressive CXCL10+ macrophages may be involved in their tumorigenesis in smokers, and the immunoregulatory LGALS9-HAVCR2 axis could be a potential immunotherapeutic target. In non-smokers, the inflammatory microenvironment may be involved in their tumor formation. Moreover, the decreased anti-tumor cytotoxicity could be associated with their suboptimal immunotherapeutic response. Our study uncovered differences in oncogenic and immune escape mechanisms between LCIS and LCINS patients and suggests potential immunotherapy strategies.
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