Mapping spatial organization and genetic cell-state regulators to target immune evasion in ovarian cancer

Christine Y. Yeh(Stanford University), Karmen Aguirre(Stanford University), Olivia Laveroni(Stanford University), Subin Kim(Stanford University), Aihui Wang(Stanford University), Brooke Liang(Stanford University), Xiaoming Zhang(Stanford University), Lucy M. Han(California Pacific Medical Center), Raeline Valbuena(Stanford University), Michael C. Bassik(Stanford University), Young‐Min Kim(Stanford University), Sylvia K. Plevritis(Stanford University), M Snyder(Stanford University), Brooke E. Howitt(Stanford Medicine), Livnat Jerby(Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (United States))
Nature Immunology
August 23, 2024
Cited by 65Open Access
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Abstract

The drivers of immune evasion are not entirely clear, limiting the success of cancer immunotherapies. Here we applied single-cell spatial and perturbational transcriptomics to delineate immune evasion in high-grade serous tubo-ovarian cancer. To this end, we first mapped the spatial organization of high-grade serous tubo-ovarian cancer by profiling more than 2.5 million cells in situ in 130 tumors from 94 patients. This revealed a malignant cell state that reflects tumor genetics and is predictive of T cell and natural killer cell infiltration levels and response to immune checkpoint blockade. We then performed Perturb-seq screens and identified genetic perturbations—including knockout of PTPN1 and ACTR8—that trigger this malignant cell state. Finally, we show that these perturbations, as well as a PTPN1/PTPN2 inhibitor, sensitize ovarian cancer cells to T cell and natural killer cell cytotoxicity, as predicted. This study thus identifies ways to study and target immune evasion by linking genetic variation, cell-state regulators and spatial biology. Here the authors provide a resource for ovarian cancer combining spatial transcriptomics, genomics, CRISPR Perturb-seq screens and in silico methods to focus on T cells and natural killer cells in the tumor and their role in immune evasion.


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