Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA, 94143, USA.
Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research, University of California, San Francisco, CA, 94158, USA.
Genome Biol. 2017 Dec 20;18(1):234. doi: 10.1186/s13059-017-1362-4.
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are abundant in gliomas and immunosuppressive TAMs are a barrier to emerging immunotherapies. It is unknown to what extent macrophages derived from peripheral blood adopt the phenotype of brain-resident microglia in pre-treatment gliomas. The relative proportions of blood-derived macrophages and microglia have been poorly quantified in clinical samples due to a paucity of markers that distinguish these cell types in malignant tissue.
We perform single-cell RNA-sequencing of human gliomas and identify phenotypic differences in TAMs of distinct lineages. We isolate TAMs from patient biopsies and compare them with macrophages from non-malignant human tissue, glioma atlases, and murine glioma models. We present a novel signature that distinguishes TAMs by ontogeny in human gliomas. Blood-derived TAMs upregulate immunosuppressive cytokines and show an altered metabolism compared to microglial TAMs. They are also enriched in perivascular and necrotic regions. The gene signature of blood-derived TAMs, but not microglial TAMs, correlates with significantly inferior survival in low-grade glioma. Surprisingly, TAMs frequently co-express canonical pro-inflammatory (M1) and alternatively activated (M2) genes in individual cells.
We conclude that blood-derived TAMs significantly infiltrate pre-treatment gliomas, to a degree that varies by glioma subtype and tumor compartment. Blood-derived TAMs do not universally conform to the phenotype of microglia, but preferentially express immunosuppressive cytokines and show an altered metabolism. Our results argue against status quo therapeutic strategies that target TAMs indiscriminately and in favor of strategies that specifically target immunosuppressive blood-derived TAMs.
肿瘤相关巨噬细胞(TAMs)在神经胶质瘤中大量存在,而免疫抑制性 TAMs 是新兴免疫疗法的障碍。目前尚不清楚外周血来源的巨噬细胞在预处理神经胶质瘤中在多大程度上具有脑驻留小胶质细胞的表型。由于缺乏区分恶性组织中这些细胞类型的标志物,临床样本中血液来源的巨噬细胞和小胶质细胞的相对比例一直难以量化。
我们对人类神经胶质瘤进行单细胞 RNA 测序,并鉴定了不同谱系 TAMs 的表型差异。我们从患者活检中分离 TAMs,并将其与非恶性人类组织、神经胶质瘤图谱和小鼠神经胶质瘤模型中的巨噬细胞进行比较。我们提出了一种新的特征,可区分人类神经胶质瘤中的 TAMs 起源。与小胶质细胞 TAMs 相比,血液来源的 TAMs 上调免疫抑制细胞因子并表现出改变的代谢。它们也富含血管周围和坏死区域。血液来源的 TAMs 的基因特征,但不是小胶质细胞 TAMs 的基因特征,与低级别神经胶质瘤的生存率显著降低相关。令人惊讶的是,TAMs 经常在单个细胞中共同表达经典促炎(M1)和替代激活(M2)基因。
我们得出结论,血液来源的 TAMs 大量浸润预处理神经胶质瘤,其程度因神经胶质瘤亚型和肿瘤区室而异。血液来源的 TAMs 并不普遍符合小胶质细胞的表型,但优先表达免疫抑制细胞因子并表现出改变的代谢。我们的结果反对不分青红皂白地针对 TAMs 的现状治疗策略,并支持专门针对免疫抑制性血液来源的 TAMs 的策略。