4.8 Article

Single-cell dissection of cellular components and interactions shaping the tumor immune phenotypes in ovarian cancer

Journal

CANCER CELL
Volume 39, Issue 7, Pages 928-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2021.04.004

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Funding

  1. Genentech/Roche

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This study provides a detailed analysis of distinct T cell infiltration patterns in ovarian tumors, revealing the impact on responses to cancer immunotherapies and the underlying key determinants and biology of tumor immune phenotypes. The research highlights potential molecular mechanisms shaping these phenotypes and may inform therapeutic strategies for enhancing clinical benefit from cancer immunotherapies.
Distinct T cell infiltration patterns, i.e., immune infiltrated, excluded, and desert, result in different responses to cancer immunotherapies. However, the key determinants and biology underpinning these tumor immune phenotypes remain elusive. Here, we provide a high-resolution dissection of the entire tumor ecosystem through single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis of 15 ovarian tumors. Immune-desert tumors are characterized by unique tumor cell-intrinsic features, including metabolic pathways and low antigen presentation, and an enrichment of monocytes and immature macrophages. Immune-infiltrated and -excluded tumors differ markedly in their T cell composition and fibroblast subsets. Furthermore, our study reveals chemokine receptor-ligand interactions within and across compartments as potential mechanisms mediating immune cell infiltration, exemplified by the tumor cell-T cell cross talk via CXCL16-CXCR6 and stromal-immune cell cross talk via CXCL12/14-CXCR4. Our data highlight potential molecular mechanisms that shape the tumor immune phenotypes and may inform therapeutic strategies to improve clinical benefit from cancer immunotherapies.

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