Single-cell spatial immune landscapes of primary and metastatic brain tumours

Elham Karimi(McGill University), Miranda W. Yu(McGill University), Sarah M. Maritan(McGill University), Lucas J. M. Perus(McGill University), Morteza Rezanejad(University of Toronto), Mark Sorin(McGill University), Matthew Dankner(McGill University), Parvaneh Fallah(McGill University), Samuel Doré(McGill University), Dongmei Zuo(McGill University), Benoit Fiset(McGill University), Daan J. Kloosterman(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), LeeAnn Ramsay(McGill University), Yuhong Wei(McGill University), Stéphanie Lam(McGill University), Roa Alsajjan(King Saud University), Ian R. Watson(McGill University), Gloria Roldan Urgoiti(University of Calgary), Morag Park(McGill University), Dieta Brandsma(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Donna L. Senger(Jewish General Hospital), Jennifer A. Chan(University of Calgary), Leila Akkari(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Kevin Petrecca(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Marie‐Christine Guiot(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Peter M. Siegel(McGill University), Daniela F. Quail(McGill University Health Centre), Logan A. Walsh(McGill Genome Centre)
Nature
February 1, 2023
Cited by 383Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Single-cell technologies have enabled the characterization of the tumour microenvironment at unprecedented depth and have revealed vast cellular diversity among tumour cells and their niche. Anti-tumour immunity relies on cell–cell relationships within the tumour microenvironment 1,2 , yet many single-cell studies lack spatial context and rely on dissociated tissues 3 . Here we applied imaging mass cytometry to characterize the immunological landscape of 139 high-grade glioma and 46 brain metastasis tumours from patients. Single-cell analysis of more than 1.1 million cells across 389 high-dimensional histopathology images enabled the spatial resolution of immune lineages and activation states, revealing differences in immune landscapes between primary tumours and brain metastases from diverse solid cancers. These analyses revealed cellular neighbourhoods associated with survival in patients with glioblastoma, which we leveraged to identify a unique population of myeloperoxidase (MPO)-positive macrophages associated with long-term survival. Our findings provide insight into the biology of primary and metastatic brain tumours, reinforcing the value of integrating spatial resolution to single-cell datasets to dissect the microenvironmental contexture of cancer.


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