Credit: WashU Medicine
A new analysis
led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has
revealed detailed 3D maps of the internal structures of multiple tumor types.
These cancer atlases reveal how different tumor cells—and the cells of a
tumor's surrounding environment—are organized, in 3D, and how that organization
changes when a tumor spreads to other organs.
The detailed findings offer scientists valuable
blueprints of tumors that could lead to new approaches to therapy and spark a
new era in the field of cancer biology, according to the researchers.
The study is part of a group of 12 papers published Oct. 30 in the Nature suite of journals by members of the Human Tumor Atlas Network. The 3D analysis—published in Nature—includes detailed data about breast, colorectal, pancreas, kidney, uterine and bile duct cancers.
Researchers at WashU Medicine have generated
structural maps of tumors in three dimensions. These 3D cell atlases, published
in Nature, reveal tumor organization at the single-cell level and
provide opportunities for exploring new approaches to cancer therapy. Tumor
images provided by Erik Storrs/Ding lab. Credit: WashU Medicine
The last decade of cancer research has been defined by tremendous advances in
understanding the activities of cells in a tumor's environment—both the cancer
itself and its support cells, including at a single-cell level.
The new study begins to reveal not just what each cell is up to, but also
where each cell is located in the intact tumor and how each interacts with its
neighboring cells, whether those cells are next door, down the street or in a
completely different neighborhood.
This new information could help scientists understand how tumors spread or
develop treatment resistance, to name a few intensive areas of ongoing study.
"These 3D maps of tumors are important because they finally let us see
what, until now, we have only been able to infer about tumor structures and
their complexity," said co-senior author Li Ding, Ph.D., the David English
Smith Professor of Medicine.
"We understood that cancer cells, immune cells and structural cells
were all present in the tumor, sometimes protecting the cancer from
chemotherapy and immune system attack, but now we can actually see those battle
lines. We now have the ability to see how regions of the tumor differ in 3D
space and how the behavior changes in response to therapy or when the tumor
spreads to other organs.
"These studies have opened a new era in cancer research with the
potential to transform the way we understand and treat cancer in the
future."
The study is led by Ding, also a research member of Siteman Cancer Center,
based at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and WashU Medicine; and her fellow co-senior
authors Feng Chen, Ph.D., a professor of medicine; Ryan C. Fields, MD, the Kim
and Tim Eberlein Distinguished Professor; William E. Gillanders, MD, a
professor of surgery, all of WashU Medicine; and Benjamin J. Raphael, Ph.D., of
Princeton University.
3D organization of tumor neighborhoods
In general, the researchers found that tumors had higher metabolic
activity—that is, they burned more fuel in their cores and more immune system
activity on their edges. They also found that a tumor can contain multiple
neighborhoods with different genetic mutations driving the tumor's growth.
These neighborhoods are being appreciated for how they lead to treatment
response and resistance in various cancer types. This suggests different
targeted treatments may be needed to address key mutations in different
neighborhoods.
"This understanding of 3D cancer metabolism will affect how our
current treatments work, and sometimes don't work, and will lead to development
of novel treatments in cancer," said Fields, who treats patients at
Siteman. "It really is transformative."
In addition, some tumor neighborhoods can have high immune cell
activity—known as hot regions. The same tumor can also have so-called cold
regions that do not have much, if any, immune activity.
Hot regions typically respond well to immunotherapies, but cold regions do
not, possibly helping to explain why some tumors appear responsive to
immunotherapies at first and then develop resistance.
If various mutation profiles as well as cold and hot neighborhoods can be
identified, it presents the possibility of designing treatment strategies that
could be effective against all neighborhoods within the same tumor.
The researchers—including co-first authors, Chia-Kuei (Simon) Mo and
Jingxian (Clara) Liu, both graduate students in Ding's lab—also found large
variation in how deeply immune cells had infiltrated the various tumors and
where different immune cell types, such as T cells or macrophages, assembled.
Some metastatic tumor samples showed the cancer breaking through immune
cell boundaries to continue the invasion of healthy tissue, perhaps
illustrating a phenomenon called immune cell exhaustion, in which the immune
system is overwhelmed by an aggressive cancer and can no longer contain its
growth.
"If we can see exhausted T cells inside a tumor, we could potentially
activate those T cells with a checkpoint inhibitor or other
immunotherapies," Ding said.
"But if we don't see them, we will know certain immunotherapies won't
work. These tumor maps can help us predict treatment resistance. We have never
been able to talk this way about tumors before—being able to see that immune cells are present in the tumor, suggesting
opportunities to exploit them for treatments."
WashU Medicine researchers led two more studies as part of this package of
publications. One, appearing in Nature Cancer and co-led by
Ding and Gillanders, provides a detailed analysis of breast cancer, identifying
how different types of breast tumors originate from different cell types.
The research team also found that T cell exhaustion was common in an
aggressive tumor known as triple-negative breast cancer. Knowledge of the
"cell of origin" and the immune landscape in breast cancer could help
guide future treatment strategies.
The other paper, appearing in Nature Methods and co-led by Ding, of WashU Medicine, and Raphael, of Princeton, describes new methods for 3D analyses of tumors, including those used in the study of the six tumor types that appeared in Nature.
by Washington University School of
Medicine
Source: 3D maps of tumor 'neighborhoods' open door to future treatment strategies
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