Single-cell profiling of tumor heterogeneity and the microenvironment in advanced non-small cell lung cancer

Fengying Wu(Tongji University), Jue Fan(Singleron Biotechnologies (china)), Yayi He(Tongji University), Anwen Xiong(Tongji University), Jia Yu(Tongji University), Yixin Li(Singleron Biotechnologies (china)), Yan Zhang(Singleron Biotechnologies (china)), Wencheng Zhao(Tongji University), Fei Zhou(Tongji University), Wei Li(Tongji University), Jie Zhang(Tongji University), Xiaosheng Zhang(Tongji University), Meng Qiao(Tongji University), Guanghui Gao(Tongji University), Shanhao Chen(Tongji University), Xiaoxia Chen(Tongji University), Xuefei Li(Tongji University), Likun Hou(Tongji University), Chunyan Wu(Tongji University), Chunxia Su(Tongji University), Shengxiang Ren(Tongji University), Margarete Odenthal(University of Cologne), Reinhard Buettner(University of Cologne), Nan Fang(Singleron Biotechnologies (china)), Caicun Zhou(Tongji University)
Nature Communications
May 5, 2021
Cited by 795Open Access
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Abstract

Lung cancer is a highly heterogeneous disease. Cancer cells and cells within the tumor microenvironment together determine disease progression, as well as response to or escape from treatment. To map the cell type-specific transcriptome landscape of cancer cells and their tumor microenvironment in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), we analyze 42 tissue biopsy samples from stage III/IV NSCLC patients by single cell RNA sequencing and present the large scale, single cell resolution profiles of advanced NSCLCs. In addition to cell types described in previous single cell studies of early stage lung cancer, we are able to identify rare cell types in tumors such as follicular dendritic cells and T helper 17 cells. Tumors from different patients display large heterogeneity in cellular composition, chromosomal structure, developmental trajectory, intercellular signaling network and phenotype dominance. Our study also reveals a correlation of tumor heterogeneity with tumor associated neutrophils, which might help to shed light on their function in NSCLC.


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