Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

MYC amplification in metastatic prostate cancer associated with reduced tumor immunogenicity

03.11.26 | Impact Journals LLC

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB transfers large imagery and model outputs quickly between field laptops, lab workstations, and secure archives.


“MYC amplification is associated with reduced tumor immunogenicity as assessed by the recovery of IR recombination reads from prostate cancer genomics files.”

BUFFALO, NY — March 11, 2026 — A new research paper was published in Volume 13 of Oncoscience on February 7, 2026, titled “ Reduced immunogenicity of MYC amplified, metastatic prostate cancer .”

Led by Sunny Kahlon of the Department of Molecular Medicine, Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida — with corresponding author George Blanck (also affiliated with the Department of Immunology, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute ) — the study uses a genomics-based approach to test whether MYC copy-number amplification in prostate tumors is linked to clinical outcomes and to tumor immunogenicity as inferred from adaptive immune receptor (IR) recombination reads recovered from sequencing files.

Using TCGA-PRAD and multiple metastatic prostate cancer datasets (including WCDT-MCRPC and CMI-MPC), the authors quantified MYC copy numbers and then measured recovery of adaptive IR recombination reads (IGH, IGK, IGL for B cells; TRA, TRB, TRG, TRD for T cells) from tumor RNAseq and whole-genome sequence files. They found that MYC amplification was more frequent in metastatic disease and associated with worse progression-free survival. Importantly, MYC-amplified metastatic tumors yielded significantly fewer recovered adaptive IR recombination reads and showed reduced expression of immune-marker gene sets, consistent with reduced tumor immunogenicity — with the reduction most pronounced for B-cell–related reads.

“The above findings reveal a correlation of increased MYC amplification with metastatic stages of prostate cancer. And, the MYC amplification is associated with poorer PFS outcomes and reduced immunogenicity, particularly in the MYC-amplified metastatic tumors.”

The authors stress that these results derive from computational mining of existing genomics files and that confirmatory immune-repertoire measurements (for example, PCR-based assays) and prospective clinical sampling will strengthen the conclusions. Nevertheless, the pattern reported — MYC amplification linked to both aggressive disease and a quantitatively reduced adaptive immune footprint — suggests that MYC status could be an important biomarker for prognosis and for predicting which metastatic prostate cancers are unlikely to respond to immune checkpoint blockade alone. The authors propose that strategies to restore T-cell (or B-cell) infiltration or function might re-sensitize MYC-amplified tumors to immunotherapy.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.18632/oncoscience.644

Correspondence to: George Blanck – gblanck@usf.edu

Abstract video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iWjrHoA9qA

Keywords: cancer, prostate cancer, MYC amplification, adaptive immune receptor recombinations, reduced immunogenicity, RNAseq files

Click here to sign up for free Altmetric alerts about this article.

About Oncoscience :

Oncoscience is a peer-reviewed, open-access, traditional journal covering the rapidly growing field of cancer research, especially emergent topics not currently covered by other journals. This journal has a special mission: freeing oncology from publication costs. It is free to readers and authors.

Oncoscience is indexed and archived by PubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, META (Chan Zuckerberg Initiative) (2018-2022), and Dimensions (Digital Science).

To learn more about Oncoscience , visit Oncoscience.us and connect with us on social media:

For media inquiries, please contact media@impactjournals.com .

Oncoscience

10.18632/oncoscience.644

News article

Not applicable

Reduced immunogenicity of MYC amplified, metastatic prostate cancer

7-Feb-2026

Authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Ryan Braithwaite
Impact Journals LLC
media@impactjournals.com

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Impact Journals LLC. (2026, March 11). MYC amplification in metastatic prostate cancer associated with reduced tumor immunogenicity. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L59ZOJ38/myc-amplification-in-metastatic-prostate-cancer-associated-with-reduced-tumor-immunogenicity.html
MLA:
"MYC amplification in metastatic prostate cancer associated with reduced tumor immunogenicity." Brightsurf News, Mar. 11 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L59ZOJ38/myc-amplification-in-metastatic-prostate-cancer-associated-with-reduced-tumor-immunogenicity.html.