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Single-cell and multi-omics analyses highlight cancer-associated fibroblasts-induced immune evasion and epithelial mesenchymal transition for smoking bladder cancer

Toxicology(2024)

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Abstract
Tobacco carcinogens are recognized as critical hazard factors for bladder tumorigenesis, affecting the prognosis of patients through aromatic amines components. However, the specific function of tobacco carcinogens and systematic assessment models in the prognosis of bladder cancer remains poorly elucidated. We retrieved bladder cancer specific tobacco carcinogens-related genes from Comparative Toxicogenomic Database, our Nanjing Bladder Cancer cohort and TCGA database. Gene×gene interaction method was utilized to establish a prognostic signature. Integrative assessment of immunogenomics, tumor microenvironments and single-cell RNA-seq were performed to illustrate the internal relations of key events from different levels. Finally, we comprehensively identified 33 essential tobacco carcinogens-related genes to construct a novel prognostic signature, and found that high-risk patients were characterized by significantly worse overall survival (HR=2.25; Plog-rank < 0.01). Single-cell RNA-seq and multi-omics analysis demonstrated that cancer-associated fibroblasts mediated the crosstalk between epithelial-mesenchymal transition progression and immune evasion. Moreover, adverse outcome pathway framework was established to facilitate our understanding to the tobacco carcinogens-triggered bladder tumorigenesis. Our study systematically provided immune microenvironmental alternations for smoking-induced adverse survival outcomes in bladder cancer. These findings facilitated the integrative multi-omics insights into risk assessment and toxic mechanisms of tobacco carcinogens.
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Key words
Single-cell multi-omics analyses,Immune microenvironment,Bladder cancer,Epithelial-mesenchymal transition,Tobacco carcinogens
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