| Literature DB >> 32976798 |
Ankur Sharma1, Justine Jia Wen Seow2, Charles-Antoine Dutertre3, Rhea Pai2, Camille Blériot4, Archita Mishra4, Regina Men Men Wong2, Gurmit Singh Naranjan Singh4, Samydurai Sudhagar2, Shabnam Khalilnezhad4, Sergio Erdal4, Hui Min Teo2, Ahad Khalilnezhad4, Svetoslav Chakarov4, Tony Kiat Hon Lim5, Alexander Chung Yaw Fui6, Alfred Kow Wei Chieh7, Cheow Peng Chung6, Glenn Kunnath Bonney7, Brian Kim-Poh Goh6, Jerry K Y Chan8, Pierce K H Chow9, Florent Ginhoux10, Ramanuj DasGupta11.
Abstract
We employed scRNA sequencing to extensively characterize the cellular landscape of human liver from development to disease. Analysis of ∼212,000 cells representing human fetal, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and mouse liver revealed remarkable fetal-like reprogramming of the tumor microenvironment. Specifically, the HCC ecosystem displayed features reminiscent of fetal development, including re-emergence of fetal-associated endothelial cells (PLVAP/VEGFR2) and fetal-like (FOLR2) tumor-associated macrophages. In a cross-species comparative analysis, we discovered remarkable similarity between mouse embryonic, fetal-liver, and tumor macrophages. Spatial transcriptomics further revealed a shared onco-fetal ecosystem between fetal liver and HCC. Furthermore, gene regulatory analysis, spatial transcriptomics, and in vitro functional assays implicated VEGF and NOTCH signaling in maintaining onco-fetal ecosystem. Taken together, we report a shared immunosuppressive onco-fetal ecosystem in fetal liver and HCC. Our results unravel a previously unexplored onco-fetal reprogramming of the tumor ecosystem, provide novel targets for therapeutic interventions in HCC, and open avenues for identifying similar paradigms in other cancers and disease.Entities:
Keywords: FOLR2; HCC; Hepatocellular carcinoma; NOTCH; PLVAP; TAMs; endothelial cells; onco-fetal reprogramming; scRNA-seq; tumor associated macrophages; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32976798 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.08.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582