High MGMT expression identifies aggressive colorectal cancer with distinct genomic features and immune evasion properties

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Abstract

Introduction The epigenetic silencing of O 6 -methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) is associated with reduced DNA repair capacity, carcinogenesis and increased sensitivity to alkylating chemotherapy. However, the biological role and clinical significance of MGMT overexpression in cancer remains poorly understood. Methods Using multiplexed quantitative immunofluorescence we measured the localized levels of MGMT protein, γ 3H2AX and CD8+ T cells in multiple retrospective colorectal cancer (CRC) cohorts. Genomic and transcriptomic features of selected cases were also studied with whole exome DNA sequencing and genome-wide methylation analysis. MGMT-methylated human CRC cells SW620 were transfected with an MGMT-containing plasmid and co-cultured with allogeneic peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Results A subset of CRCs showed MGMT protein upregulation associated with lower γ 3H2AX, reduced CD8+ tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), mismatch repair proficient (pMMR) status and shorter survival. CD8+ TILs were more distant from MGMT-expressing cells than MGMT-negative cells and the MGMT promoter methylation status did not highly correlate with MGMT protein levels in CRC. In genomic/transcriptomic analysis, high MGMT expression was associated with a lower nonsynonymous somatic mutational burden, higher transition-to-transversion mutation ratio, increased deleterious TP53 variants and distinct transcriptomic profiles. The exogenous expression of MGMT in SW620 CRC cells reduced the number of spontaneous nonsynonymous mutations, reproduced mutational features of MGMT-high CRC and limited the in vitro T-cell-mediated killing of malignant cells induced by proinflammatory cytokines in tumor/immune cell co-cultures. Conclusions MGMT overexpression identifies a previously undescribed subset of CRCs with distinct biological and clinical properties including reduced mutagenesis, adaptive immune evasion, predominantly pMMR phenotype and aggressive clinical course. Direct, quantitative assessment of MGMT protein expression using spatially resolved analysis is more reliable than inference of MGMT expression by promoter methylation status in CRC.

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APA

Zhang, J. Y., Rajendran, B. K. P., Desai, S. S., Gibson, J., Dipalermo, J., Lorusso, P., … Schalper, K. A. (2025). High MGMT expression identifies aggressive colorectal cancer with distinct genomic features and immune evasion properties. Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, 13(9). https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2025-011653

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