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MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy

How standard care shapes the cellular composition of recurrent medulloblastoma (MB), if therapy selects for specific tumor or immune cell types, is unknown. We report the pilot phase of our ongoing effort to profile human longitudinal MB specimens via single-cell transcriptomics and epigenetics. We...

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Autores principales: Wang, Lin, Jung, Jangham, Babikir, Husam, Shamardani, Karin, Kasahara, Noriyuki, Müller, Sabine, Diaz, Aaron
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9164900/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.433
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author Wang, Lin
Jung, Jangham
Babikir, Husam
Shamardani, Karin
Kasahara, Noriyuki
Müller, Sabine
Diaz, Aaron
author_facet Wang, Lin
Jung, Jangham
Babikir, Husam
Shamardani, Karin
Kasahara, Noriyuki
Müller, Sabine
Diaz, Aaron
author_sort Wang, Lin
collection PubMed
description How standard care shapes the cellular composition of recurrent medulloblastoma (MB), if therapy selects for specific tumor or immune cell types, is unknown. We report the pilot phase of our ongoing effort to profile human longitudinal MB specimens via single-cell transcriptomics and epigenetics. We profiled 11 diagnostic and eight recurrent specimens from 19 subjects via single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq), and four subjects via single-nucleus assay for transposase-accessible chromatin. Specimens from select subjects were also profiled to assess genome-wide enhancer activity via single-nucleus cleavage-under-targets and tagmentation. We found an upregulation of the DNA-damage response, RNA translation, WNT and NOTCH signaling in recurrent specimens. The percentages of stem-like cells increased by over two-fold at recurrence. We found that microglia and oligodendrocyte-lineage cells were the most abundant non-malignant tumor-associated cell types, representing 2%-10% of cells profiled. Microglia abundances were relatively stable across molecular subtypes, and when comparing primary to recurrent tumors. There was a moderate, but statistically significant, increase in oligodendrocyte abundance in SSH and WNT tumors, compared to Group 3/4 tumors. We compared gene expression in tumor cells with public snRNA-seq from developing human cerebella (PCW 9-21). Combined Group-3/4 cell analysis supports a common lineage hierarchy, with an enrichment for unipolar brush-cell and Purkinje-cell phenotypes found in Group-4 tumors. All Group-3/4 cases contained cycling cells expressing markers of PAX2+ interneuron progenitors, most cycling cells had this phenotype. All specimens contained populations of non-cycling granule-cell progenitor-like cells. We performed single-cell co-expression receptor/ligand analysis to infer paracrine signaling between tumor and non-malignant cell types. This identified both tumor cells and microglia as sources of growth factors, pro-inflammatory cytokines, and pro-apoptotic ligands. Non-malignant oligodendrocyte-lineage cells uniquely expressed IL6-family cytokines, pleiotrophin, and class-III semaphorins. These studies shed light on the cellular heterogeneity of MB and the effect of standard therapy in shaping composition at recurrence.
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spelling pubmed-91649002022-06-05 MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy Wang, Lin Jung, Jangham Babikir, Husam Shamardani, Karin Kasahara, Noriyuki Müller, Sabine Diaz, Aaron Neuro Oncol Medulloblastoma How standard care shapes the cellular composition of recurrent medulloblastoma (MB), if therapy selects for specific tumor or immune cell types, is unknown. We report the pilot phase of our ongoing effort to profile human longitudinal MB specimens via single-cell transcriptomics and epigenetics. We profiled 11 diagnostic and eight recurrent specimens from 19 subjects via single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq), and four subjects via single-nucleus assay for transposase-accessible chromatin. Specimens from select subjects were also profiled to assess genome-wide enhancer activity via single-nucleus cleavage-under-targets and tagmentation. We found an upregulation of the DNA-damage response, RNA translation, WNT and NOTCH signaling in recurrent specimens. The percentages of stem-like cells increased by over two-fold at recurrence. We found that microglia and oligodendrocyte-lineage cells were the most abundant non-malignant tumor-associated cell types, representing 2%-10% of cells profiled. Microglia abundances were relatively stable across molecular subtypes, and when comparing primary to recurrent tumors. There was a moderate, but statistically significant, increase in oligodendrocyte abundance in SSH and WNT tumors, compared to Group 3/4 tumors. We compared gene expression in tumor cells with public snRNA-seq from developing human cerebella (PCW 9-21). Combined Group-3/4 cell analysis supports a common lineage hierarchy, with an enrichment for unipolar brush-cell and Purkinje-cell phenotypes found in Group-4 tumors. All Group-3/4 cases contained cycling cells expressing markers of PAX2+ interneuron progenitors, most cycling cells had this phenotype. All specimens contained populations of non-cycling granule-cell progenitor-like cells. We performed single-cell co-expression receptor/ligand analysis to infer paracrine signaling between tumor and non-malignant cell types. This identified both tumor cells and microglia as sources of growth factors, pro-inflammatory cytokines, and pro-apoptotic ligands. Non-malignant oligodendrocyte-lineage cells uniquely expressed IL6-family cytokines, pleiotrophin, and class-III semaphorins. These studies shed light on the cellular heterogeneity of MB and the effect of standard therapy in shaping composition at recurrence. Oxford University Press 2022-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9164900/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.433 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Medulloblastoma
Wang, Lin
Jung, Jangham
Babikir, Husam
Shamardani, Karin
Kasahara, Noriyuki
Müller, Sabine
Diaz, Aaron
MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
title MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
title_full MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
title_fullStr MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
title_full_unstemmed MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
title_short MEDB-59. A draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
title_sort medb-59. a draft atlas of medulloblastoma cellular evolution under therapy
topic Medulloblastoma
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9164900/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.433
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