Background
Ribonucleotide reductase regulatory subunit M2 (RRM2) has been reported to be an oncogene in some malignant tumors, such as lung adenocarcinoma, oral squamous cell carcinoma, glioblastoma, and breast cancer. However, the clinical significance of RRM2 in hepatocellular carcinoma has been less studied. The
Conclusion
Over-expression of RRM2 predict adverse prognosis and is correlated with immune infiltrates in HCC. RRM2 may be a significant molecular biomarker for HCC diagnosis and prognosis.
Methods
The RRM2 expression levels and clinical features were downloaded from the TCGA database. Immunohistochemistry
Results
The RRM2 expression level in tumor tissues was higher than normal tissues (P <0.001). The elevated expression of RRM2 in HCC was significantly correlated with T stage (P <0.05), pathologic stage (P <0.05), tumor status (P <0.05), histologic grade (P<0.001), and AFP (P <0.001). HCC with higher RRM2 expression was positively associated with worse OS (overall survival), PFS (progression-free survival), and DSS (disease-specific survival). In the univariate analysis, the expression of RRM2, T stage, M stage, pathologic stage, and tumor status were negatively correlated with OS (P <0.05). Further analysis using multivariate Cox regression showed that tumor status (P<0.01) and RRM2 expression (P<0.05) were independent prognostic factors of OS in HCC. GO/KEGG analysis showed that the critical biological process (chromosome condensation and p53 signaling pathway) might be the possible function mechanism in promoting HCC. Moreover, GSEA showed that several pathways were enriched in RRM2 high-expression samples, including PD-1 signaling, cell cycle, P27 pathway, and T cell receptor signaling pathway. RRM2 was significantly correlated with the infiltration level of CD8 T cells, Cytotoxic cells, DCs, Neutrophils, NK cells, and T helper cells (P <0.05).
