4.6 Article

Dissecting intratumoral myeloid cell plasticity by single cell RNA-seq

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 3072-3085

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.2113

Keywords

intercellular interaction; monocyte-to-M2 differentiation; non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq); trajectory analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Cancer Genomics, Tumor Tissue Repository, and Bioinformatics Shared Resources under the NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA012197]
  2. Hanes and Willis Professorship in Cancer
  3. Mary Kirkpatrick Professorship for Breast Cancer Research
  4. National Foundation for Cancer Research
  5. Charles L. Spurr Professorship Fund
  6. Deal Fund Travel Award

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Tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells are the most abundant leukocyte population within tumors. Molecular cues from the tumor microenvironment promote the differentiation of immature myeloid cells toward an immunosuppressive phenotype. However, the in situ dynamics of the transcriptional reprogramming underlying this process are poorly understood. Therefore, we applied single cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) to computationally investigate the cellular composition and transcriptional dynamics of tumor and adjacent normal tissues from 4 early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Our scRNA-seq analyses identified 11 485 cells that varied in identity and gene expression traits between normal and tumor tissues. Among these, myeloid cell populations exhibited the most diverse changes between tumor and normal tissues, consistent with tumor-mediated reprogramming. Through trajectory analysis, we identified a differentiation path from CD14+ monocytes to M2 macrophages (monocyte-to-M2). This differentiation path was reproducible across patients, accompanied by increased expression of genes (eg, MRC1/CD206, MSR1/CD204, PPARG, TREM2) with significantly enriched functions (Oxidative phosphorylation and P53 pathway) and decreased expression of genes (eg, CXCL2, IL1B) with significantly enriched functions (TNF-alpha signaling via NF-kappa B and inflammatory response). Our analysis further identified a co-regulatory network implicating upstream transcription factors (JUN, NFKBIA) in monocyte-to-M2 differentiation, and activated ligand-receptor interactions (eg, SFTPA1-TLR2, ICAM1-ITGAM) suggesting intratumoral mechanisms whereby epithelial cells stimulate monocyte-to-M2 differentiation. Overall, our study identified the prevalent monocyte-to-M2 differentiation in NSCLC, accompanied by an intricate transcriptional reprogramming mediated by specific transcriptional activators and intercellular crosstalk involving ligand-receptor interactions.

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