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Spatially confined sub-tumor microenvironments in pancreatic cancer
Author(s) -
Barbara T. Grünwald,
Antoine Devisme,
Geoffroy Andrieux,
Foram Vyas,
Kazeera Aliar,
Curtis W. McCloskey,
Andrew Macklin,
Gun Ho Jang,
Robert E. Denroche,
Joan M. Romero,
Prashant Bavi,
Peter Bronsert,
Faiyaz Notta,
Grainne M. O’Kane,
Julie M. Wilson,
Jennifer J. Knox,
Laura Tamblyn,
Molly L. Udaskin,
Nikolina Radulovich,
Sandra E. Fischer,
Melanie Boerries,
Steven Gallinger,
Thomas Kislinger,
Rama Khokha
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2021.09.022
Subject(s) - biology , tumor microenvironment , pancreatic cancer , phenotype , fibroblast , cancer research , tumor progression , genetic heterogeneity , immune system , cancer associated fibroblasts , pancreatic tumor , cancer , immunology , genetics , cell culture , gene
Intratumoral heterogeneity is a critical frontier in understanding how the tumor microenvironment (TME) propels malignant progression. Here, we deconvolute the human pancreatic TME through large-scale integration of histology-guided regional multiOMICs with clinical data and patient-derived preclinical models. We discover "subTMEs," histologically definable tissue states anchored in fibroblast plasticity, with regional relationships to tumor immunity, subtypes, differentiation, and treatment response. "Reactive" subTMEs rich in complex but functionally coordinated fibroblast communities were immune hot and inhabited by aggressive tumor cell phenotypes. The matrix-rich "deserted" subTMEs harbored fewer activated fibroblasts and tumor-suppressive features yet were markedly chemoprotective and enriched upon chemotherapy. SubTMEs originated in fibroblast differentiation trajectories, and transitory states were notable both in single-cell transcriptomics and in situ. The intratumoral co-occurrence of subTMEs produced patient-specific phenotypic and computationally predictable heterogeneity tightly linked to malignant biology. Therefore, heterogeneity within the plentiful, notorious pancreatic TME is not random but marks fundamental tissue organizational units.

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