Single-cell analysis identifies LYPD6B as a tumor-intrinsic candidate associated with immunotherapy non-response in breast cancer
Abstract
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) induces durable clinical responses in a subset of breast cancer patients, but many show limited benefit from anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy. Characterizing differences in the tumor microenvironment (TME) and tumor-intrinsic immune evasion programs between responders (R) and non-responders is critical to enhance immunotherapy efficacy and rational combination strategies. Three public scRNA-seq datasets of PD-(L)1-treated breast cancer (51 patients; 327,022 cells) were integrated. Patients were categorized as R or NR by clinical outcomes. Paired pre-/post-treatment samples were analyzed for TME composition, immune activation, IFN-response programs and T cell dynamics. NR-associated DEGs were screened to identify tumor-intrinsic non-response drivers, with validations including CRISPR knockout, drug-repurposing, molecular assays, immunohistochemistry and pan-cancer analyses. Relative to NR, R had increased CD8+ T cell infiltration, higher interferon-response activity in immune cells and myeloid/B-cell remodeling. Pseudotime analysis showed T cells progressed from activation to cytotoxic differentiation then exhaustion in R, matching activation-associated negative feedback in effective ICB. Tumor-intrinsic screening identified LYPD6B, a membrane gene upregulated in NR cancer cells, whose high expression suppressed antigen processing/presentation and IFNα/β signaling. Functional assays confirmed high LYPD6B expression in breast cancer cell lines; its ablation impaired proliferation and clonogenic growth and induced apoptosis. Drug-repurposing analyses found venetoclax binds LYPD6B and recapitulates its anti-proliferative effects. IHC and pan-cancer analyses verified LYPD6B’s tumor-cell localization and its association with immune infiltration and checkpoint expression. We identify LYPD6B as a tumor cell-intrinsic candidate linked to immune-evasive transcriptional programs and PD-(L)1 non-response in breast cancer, making it a potential target for combination immunotherapy.
Metrics
DOI:
Submission ID:
Downloads
Posted
How to Cite
Declaration of Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interests to disclose.
Copyright
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder.
All rights reserved. This work is protected by copyright. No part of this work may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright holder.