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Single-cell profiling of myeloid cells in glioblastoma across species and disease stage reveals macrophage competition and specialization.

Ana Rita Pombo AntunesIsabelle ScheyltjensFrancesca LodiJulie MessiaenAsier AntoranzJohnny DuerinckDaliya KanchevaLiesbet MartensKaren De VlaminckHannah Van HoveSigne Schmidt Kjølner HansenFrancesca Maria BosisioKoen Van der BorghtSteven De VleeschouwerRaf M E SciotLuc BouwensMichiel VerfaillieNiels VandammeRoosmarijn E. VandenbrouckeOlivier De WeverYvan SaeysMartin GuilliamsConny GysemansBart NeynsFrederik De SmetDiether LambrechtsJo A Van GinderachterKiavash Movahedi
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2021)
Glioblastomas are aggressive primary brain cancers that recur as therapy-resistant tumors. Myeloid cells control glioblastoma malignancy, but their dynamics during disease progression remain poorly understood. Here, we employed single-cell RNA sequencing and CITE-seq to map the glioblastoma immune landscape in mouse tumors and in patients with newly diagnosed disease or recurrence. This revealed a large and diverse myeloid compartment, with dendritic cell and macrophage populations that were conserved across species and dynamic across disease stages. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) consisted of microglia- or monocyte-derived populations, with both exhibiting additional heterogeneity, including subsets with conserved lipid and hypoxic signatures. Microglia- and monocyte-derived TAMs were self-renewing populations that competed for space and could be depleted via CSF1R blockade. Microglia-derived TAMs were predominant in newly diagnosed tumors, but were outnumbered by monocyte-derived TAMs following recurrence, especially in hypoxic tumor environments. Our results unravel the glioblastoma myeloid landscape and provide a framework for future therapeutic interventions.
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