Skin basal cell carcinomas assemble a pro-tumorigenic spatially organized and self-propagating Trem2+ myeloid niche

Daniel Haensel(Stanford University), Bence Dániel(Gladstone Institutes), Sadhana Gaddam(Stanford University), Cory Pan(Stanford University), Tania Fabo(Stanford University), Jeremy Bjelajac(Stanford University), Anna R. Jussila(Stanford University), Fernanda Gonzalez(Stanford University), Nancy Yanzhe Li(Stanford University), Yun Chen(Washington University in St. Louis), Jinchao Hou(Washington University in St. Louis), Tiffany Patel(Stanford University), Sumaira Z. Aasi(Stanford University), Ansuman T. Satpathy(Gladstone Institutes), Anthony E. Oro(Stanford Medicine)
Nature Communications
May 10, 2023
Cited by 28Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Cancer immunotherapies have revolutionized treatment but have shown limited success as single-agent therapies highlighting the need to understand the origin, assembly, and dynamics of heterogeneous tumor immune niches. Here, we use single-cell and imaging-based spatial analysis to elucidate three microenvironmental neighborhoods surrounding the heterogeneous basal cell carcinoma tumor epithelia. Within the highly proliferative neighborhood, we find that TREM2 + skin cancer-associated macrophages (SCAMs) support the proliferation of a distinct tumor epithelial population through an immunosuppression-independent manner via oncostatin-M/JAK-STAT3 signaling. SCAMs represent a unique tumor-specific TREM2 + population defined by VCAM1 surface expression that is not found in normal homeostatic skin or during wound healing. Furthermore, SCAMs actively proliferate and self-propagate through multiple serial tumor passages, indicating long-term potential. The tumor rapidly drives SCAM differentiation, with intratumoral injections sufficient to instruct naive bone marrow-derived monocytes to polarize within days. This work provides mechanistic insights into direct tumor-immune niche dynamics independent of immunosuppression, providing the basis for potential combination tumor therapies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis