Clonal cell states link Barrett’s esophagus and esophageal adenocarcinoma

Rodrigo A. Gier(University of Pennsylvania), Raúl A. Reyes Hueros(University of Pennsylvania), Jiazhen Rong(University of Pennsylvania), Maureen DeMarshall(University of Pennsylvania), Tatiana A. Karakasheva(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Amanda B. Muir(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Gary W. Falk(University of Pennsylvania), Nancy R. Zhang(University of Pennsylvania), Sydney M. Shaffer(University of Pennsylvania)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
January 26, 2023
Cited by 12Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Barrett's esophagus is a common type of metaplasia and a precursor of esophageal adenocarcinoma. However, the cell states and lineage connections underlying the origin, maintenance, and progression of Barrett's esophagus have not been resolved in humans. To address this, we performed single-cell lineage tracing and transcriptional profiling of patient cells isolated from metaplastic and healthy tissue. Our analysis revealed discrete lineages in Barrett's esophagus, normal esophagus, and gastric cardia. Transitional basal progenitor cells of the gastroesophageal junction were unexpectedly related to both esophagus and gastric cardia cells. Barrett's esophagus was polyclonal, with lineages that contained all progenitor and differentiated cell types. In contrast, precancerous dysplastic foci were initiated by the expansion of a single molecularly aberrant Barrett's esophagus clone. Together, these findings provide a comprehensive view of the cell dynamics of Barrett's esophagus, linking cell states along the full disease trajectory, from its origin to cancer.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis