Spatially resolved multi-omics deciphers bidirectional tumor-host interdependence in glioblastoma

Vidhya M. Ravi(University of Freiburg), Paulina Will(University of Freiburg), Jan Kueckelhaus(University of Freiburg), Na Sun(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Kevin Joseph(University of Freiburg), Henrike Salié(University of Freiburg), Lea Vollmer(University of Freiburg), Ugnė Kuliešiūtė(University of Freiburg), Jasmin von Ehr(University of Freiburg), Jasim Kada Benotmane(University of Freiburg), Nicolas Neidert(University of Freiburg), Marie Follo(University of Freiburg), Florian Scherer(University of Freiburg), Jonathan M. Goeldner(University of Freiburg), Simon P. Behringer(University of Freiburg), Pamela Franco(University of Freiburg), Mohammed Khiat(University of Freiburg), Junyi Zhang(University of Freiburg), Ulrich Hofmann(University of Freiburg), Christian Fung(University of Freiburg), Franz Ricklefs(Universität Hamburg), Katrin Lamszus(Universität Hamburg), Melanie Boerries(University of Freiburg), Manching Ku(University of Freiburg), Jürgen Beck(University of Freiburg), Roman Sankowski(University of Freiburg), Marius Schwabenland(University of Freiburg), Marco Prinz(University of Freiburg), Ulrich Schüller(Universität Hamburg), Saskia Killmer(University of Freiburg), Bertram Bengsch(University of Freiburg), Axel Walch(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Daniel Delev(RWTH Aachen University), Oliver Schnell(University of Freiburg), Dieter Henrik Heiland(University of Freiburg)
Cancer Cell
June 1, 2022
Cited by 632Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Glioblastomas are malignant tumors of the central nervous system hallmarked by subclonal diversity and dynamic adaptation amid developmental hierarchies. The source of dynamic reorganization within the spatial context of these tumors remains elusive. Here, we characterized glioblastomas by spatially resolved transcriptomics, metabolomics, and proteomics. By deciphering regionally shared transcriptional programs across patients, we infer that glioblastoma is organized by spatial segregation of lineage states and adapts to inflammatory and/or metabolic stimuli, reminiscent of the reactive transformation in mature astrocytes. Integration of metabolic imaging and imaging mass cytometry uncovered locoregional tumor-host interdependence, resulting in spatially exclusive adaptive transcriptional programs. Inferring copy-number alterations emphasizes a spatially cohesive organization of subclones associated with reactive transcriptional programs, confirming that environmental stress gives rise to selection pressure. A model of glioblastoma stem cells implanted into human and rodent neocortical tissue mimicking various environments confirmed that transcriptional states originate from dynamic adaptation to various environments.


Related Papers