| Literature DB >> 34035226 |
Yu Wang1,2, Yiyi Liang1,2, Haiyan Xu1,2, Xiao Zhang1,2, Tiebo Mao1,2, Jiujie Cui1,2, Jiayu Yao1,2, Yongchao Wang1,2, Feng Jiao1,2, Xiuying Xiao1,2, Jiong Hu1,2, Qing Xia1,2, Xiaofei Zhang1,2, Xujun Wang3, Yongwei Sun4, Deliang Fu5, Lei Shen6, Xiaojiang Xu7, Jing Xue8, Liwei Wang9,10.
Abstract
The current pathological and molecular classification of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) provides limited guidance for treatment options, especially for immunotherapy. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are major players of desmoplastic stroma in PDAC, modulating tumor progression and therapeutic response. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we explored the intertumoral heterogeneity among PDAC patients with different degrees of desmoplasia. We found substantial intertumoral heterogeneity in CAFs, ductal cancer cells, and immune cells between the extremely dense and loose types of PDACs (dense-type, high desmoplasia; loose-type, low desmoplasia). Notably, no difference in CAF abundance was detected, but a novel subtype of CAFs with a highly activated metabolic state (meCAFs) was found in loose-type PDAC compared to dense-type PDAC. MeCAFs had highly active glycolysis, whereas the corresponding cancer cells used oxidative phosphorylation as a major metabolic mode rather than glycolysis. We found that the proportion and activity of immune cells were much higher in loose-type PDAC than in dense-type PDAC. Then, the clinical significance of the CAF subtypes was further validated in our PDAC cohort and a public database. PDAC patients with abundant meCAFs had a higher risk of metastasis and a poor prognosis but showed a dramatically better response to immunotherapy (64.71% objective response rate, one complete response). We characterized the intertumoral heterogeneity of cellular components, immune activity, and metabolic status between dense- and loose-type PDACs and identified meCAFs as a novel CAF subtype critical for PDAC progression and the susceptibility to immunotherapy.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34035226 DOI: 10.1038/s41421-021-00271-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Discov ISSN: 2056-5968 Impact factor: 10.849