Department of Neurological Surgery and.
Malnati Brain Tumor Institute of the Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
JCI Insight. 2022 May 9;7(9):e157612. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.157612.
BACKGROUNDImmune cell profiling of primary and metastatic CNS tumors has been focused on the tumor, not the tumor microenvironment (TME), or has been analyzed via biopsies.METHODSEn bloc resections of gliomas (n = 10) and lung metastases (n = 10) were analyzed via tissue segmentation and high-dimension Opal 7-color multiplex imaging. Single-cell RNA analyses were used to infer immune cell functionality.RESULTSWithin gliomas, T cells were localized in the infiltrating edge and perivascular space of tumors, while residing mostly in the stroma of metastatic tumors. CD163+ macrophages were evident throughout the TME of metastatic tumors, whereas in gliomas, CD68+, CD11c+CD68+, and CD11c+CD68+CD163+ cell subtypes were commonly observed. In lung metastases, T cells interacted with CD163+ macrophages as dyads and clusters at the brain-tumor interface and within the tumor itself and as clusters within the necrotic core. In contrast, gliomas typically lacked dyad and cluster interactions, except for T cell CD68+ cell dyads within the tumor. Analysis of transcriptomic data in glioblastomas revealed that innate immune cells expressed both proinflammatory and immunosuppressive gene signatures.CONCLUSIONOur results show that immunosuppressive macrophages are abundant within the TME and that the immune cell interactome between cancer lineages is distinct. Further, these data provide information for evaluating the role of different immune cell populations in brain tumor growth and therapeutic responses.FUNDINGThis study was supported by the NIH (NS120547), a Developmental research project award (P50CA221747), ReMission Alliance, institutional funding from Northwestern University and the Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, and gifts from the Mosky family and Perry McKay. Performed in the Flow Cytometry & Cellular Imaging Core Facility at MD Anderson Cancer Center, this study received support in part from the NIH (CA016672) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Research Specialist award 1 (R50 CA243707). Additional support was provided by CCSG Bioinformatics Shared Resource 5 (P30 CA046592), a gift from Agilent Technologies, a Research Scholar Grant from the American Cancer Society (RSG-16-005-01), a Precision Health Investigator Award from University of Michigan (U-M) Precision Health, the NCI (R37-CA214955), startup institutional research funds from U-M, and a Biomedical Informatics & Data Science Training Grant (T32GM141746).
背景
对原发性和转移性中枢神经系统肿瘤的免疫细胞分析主要集中在肿瘤本身,而不是肿瘤微环境(TME),或者是通过活检进行分析。
方法
对 10 例胶质瘤和 10 例肺转移瘤进行大块切除,通过组织分割和高维 Opal 7 色多重成像进行分析。单细胞 RNA 分析用于推断免疫细胞的功能。
结果
在胶质瘤中,T 细胞定位于肿瘤的浸润边缘和血管周围空间,而主要存在于转移性肿瘤的基质中。在转移性肿瘤的整个 TME 中都可以看到 CD163+巨噬细胞,而在胶质瘤中,CD68+、CD11c+CD68+和 CD11c+CD68+CD163+细胞亚型则较为常见。在肺转移瘤中,T 细胞与 CD163+巨噬细胞在脑肿瘤界面和肿瘤内部以及在坏死核心内形成双联体和簇。相比之下,胶质瘤通常缺乏双联体和簇的相互作用,除了肿瘤内的 T 细胞 CD68+细胞双联体。对胶质母细胞瘤的转录组数据分析显示,固有免疫细胞表达促炎和免疫抑制基因特征。
结论
我们的结果表明,TME 中存在丰富的免疫抑制性巨噬细胞,不同癌症谱系之间的免疫细胞相互作用网络是不同的。此外,这些数据为评估不同免疫细胞群体在脑肿瘤生长和治疗反应中的作用提供了信息。
资助
本研究由美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)(NS120547)、发育研究项目奖(P50CA221747)、ReMission 联盟、西北大学和 Lurie 综合癌症中心的机构资助以及 Mosky 家族和 Perry McKay 的捐赠资助。在安德森癌症中心的流式细胞仪和细胞成像核心设施中进行的这项研究得到了美国国立卫生研究院(CA016672)和国家癌症研究所(NCI)研究专家奖 1(R50 CA243707)的部分支持。此外,还得到了 CCSG 生物信息学共享资源 5(P30 CA046592)、安捷伦科技公司的礼物、美国癌症协会的研究学者奖(RSG-16-005-01)、密歇根大学(U-M)精准健康计划的精准健康研究员奖、NCI(R37-CA214955)、U-M 的启动机构研究资金以及生物医学信息学和数据科学培训补助金(T32GM141746)的支持。