Cross center single-cell RNA sequencing study of the immune microenvironment in rapid progressing multiple myeloma

被引:0
作者
William Pilcher
Beena E. Thomas
Swati S. Bhasin
Reyka G. Jayasinghe
Lijun Yao
Edgar Gonzalez-Kozlova
Surendra Dasari
Seunghee Kim-Schulze
Adeeb Rahman
Jonathan Patton
Mark Fiala
Giulia Cheloni
Taxiarchis Kourelis
Madhav V. Dhodapkar
Ravi Vij
Shaadi Mehr
Mark Hamilton
Hearn Jay Cho
Daniel Auclair
David E. Avigan
Shaji K. Kumar
Sacha Gnjatic
Li Ding
Manoj Bhasin
机构
[1] Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center,Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering
[2] Emory University,Department of Pediatrics
[3] Emory School of Medicine,Department of Medicine
[4] Washington University School of Medicine,Human Immune Monitoring Center
[5] Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai,Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences
[6] Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Division of Biomedical Statistics & Informatics, Department of Quantitative Health Sciences
[7] Mayo Clinic,Department of Oncological Sciences
[8] Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
[9] Harvard Medical School,Mayo Clinic Rochester
[10] Division of Hematology,Winship Cancer Institute
[11] Department of Hematology/Medical Oncology Emory University School of Medicine,Department of Biomedical Informatics
[12] Emory University,undefined
[13] Washington University School of Medicine,undefined
[14] Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF),undefined
[15] Emory School of Medicine,undefined
来源
npj Genomic Medicine | / 8卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite advancements in understanding the pathophysiology of Multiple Myeloma (MM), the cause of rapid progressing disease in a subset of patients is still unclear. MM’s progression is facilitated by complex interactions with the surrounding bone marrow (BM) cells, forming a microenvironment that supports tumor growth and drug resistance. Understanding the immune microenvironment is key to identifying factors that promote rapid progression of MM. To accomplish this, we performed a multi-center single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) study on 102,207 cells from 48 CD138- BM samples collected at the time of disease diagnosis from 18 patients with either rapid progressing (progression-free survival (PFS) < 18 months) or non-progressing (PFS > 4 years) disease. Comparative analysis of data from three centers demonstrated similar transcriptome profiles and cell type distributions, indicating subtle technical variation in scRNA-seq, opening avenues for an expanded multicenter trial. Rapid progressors depicted significantly higher enrichment of GZMK+ and TIGIT+ exhausted CD8+ T-cells (P = 0.022) along with decreased expression of cytolytic markers (PRF1, GZMB, GNLY). We also observed a significantly higher enrichment of M2 tolerogenic macrophages in rapid progressors and activation of pro-proliferative signaling pathways, such as BAFF, CCL, and IL16. On the other hand, non-progressive patients depicted higher enrichment for immature B Cells (i.e., Pre/Pro B cells), with elevated expression for markers of B cell development (IGLL1, SOX4, DNTT). This multi-center study identifies the enrichment of various pro-tumorigenic cell populations and pathways in those with rapid progressing disease and further validates the robustness of scRNA-seq data generated at different study centers.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 117 条
[11]  
Dasari S(2020)Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals compromised immune microenvironment in precursor stages of multiple myeloma Nat. Cancer 1 493-6235
[12]  
Anderson E(2006)Role of B-cell–activating factor in adhesion and growth of human multiple myeloma cells in the bone marrow microenvironment Cancer Res. 66 6675-5579
[13]  
Kumar S(2011)The Immune Microenvironment of Myeloma Cancer Microenviron. 4 313-86
[14]  
Kourelis TV(2019)Early alterations in stem-like/marrow-resident T cells and innate and myeloid cells in preneoplastic gammopathy JCI Insight 4 e127807-183
[15]  
Herceg Z(2010)Reduced immune effector cell NKG2D expression and increased levels of soluble NKG2D ligands in multiple myeloma may not be causally linked Cancer Immunol., Immunother. 59 829-706
[16]  
Hainaut P(2016)T cells in multiple myeloma display features of exhaustion and senescence at the tumor site J. Hematol. Oncol. 9 116-2662
[17]  
Guo M(2022)Survival Genie, a web platform for survival analysis across pediatric and adult cancers Sci. Rep. 12 346-3157
[18]  
Peng Y(2001)Chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1α modulates VLA-4 integrin-mediated multiple myeloma cell adhesion to CS-1/fibronectin and VCAM-1 Blood 97 6225-e282
[19]  
Gao A(2014)Platelet-derived growth factor-C (PDGF-C) Induces anti-apoptotic effects on macrophages through Akt and bad phosphorylation J. Biol. Chem. 289 5573-3471
[20]  
Du C(2000)Novel diversity in IL-4-mediated responses in resting human naive B cells versus germinal center/memory B cells J. Immunol. 165 e0183268-1020