Pan-cancer profiling of tumor-infiltrating natural killer cells through transcriptional reference mapping

Herman Netskar(Oslo University Hospital), Aline Pfefferle(Karolinska Institutet), Jodie P. Goodridge(Fate Therapeutics (United States)), Ebba Sohlberg(Karolinska Institutet), Olli Dufva(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Sarah A. Teichmann(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Demi Brownlie(Karolinska Institutet), Jakob Michaëlsson(Karolinska Institutet), Nicole Marquardt(Karolinska Institutet), Trevor Clancy(Oslo Cancer Cluster), Amir Horowitz(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Karl‐Johan Malmberg(Oslo University Hospital)
Nature Immunology
July 2, 2024
Cited by 81Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract The functional diversity of natural killer (NK) cell repertoires stems from differentiation, homeostatic, receptor–ligand interactions and adaptive-like responses to viral infections. In the present study, we generated a single-cell transcriptional reference map of healthy human blood- and tissue-derived NK cells, with temporal resolution and fate-specific expression of gene-regulatory networks defining NK cell differentiation. Transfer learning facilitated incorporation of tumor-infiltrating NK cell transcriptomes (39 datasets, 7 solid tumors, 427 patients) into the reference map to analyze tumor microenvironment (TME)-induced perturbations. Of the six functionally distinct NK cell states identified, a dysfunctional stressed CD56 bright state susceptible to TME-induced immunosuppression and a cytotoxic TME-resistant effector CD56 dim state were commonly enriched across tumor types, the ratio of which was predictive of patient outcome in malignant melanoma and osteosarcoma. This resource may inform the design of new NK cell therapies and can be extended through transfer learning to interrogate new datasets from experimental perturbations or disease conditions.


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