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Lineage-dependent gene expression programs influence the immune landscape of colorectal cancer.

Hae-Ock LeeYourae HongHakki Emre EtliogluYong Beom ChoValentina PomellaBen Van den BoschJasper VanheckeSara VerbandtHyekyung HongJae-Woong MinNayoung KimHye Hyeon EumJunbin QianBram BoeckxDiether LambrechtsPetros TsantoulisGert De HertoghWoosung ChungTaeseob LeeMinae AnHyun-Tae ShinJe-Gun JoungMin-Hyeok JungGunhwan KoPratyaksha WirapatiSeok Hyung KimHee Cheol KimSeong Hyeon YunIain Bee Huat TanBobby RanjanWoo Yong LeeTae-You KimJung Kyoon ChoiYoung-Joon KimShyam PrabhakarSabine TejparWoong-Yang Park
Published in: Nature genetics (2020)
Immunotherapy for metastatic colorectal cancer is effective only for mismatch repair-deficient tumors with high microsatellite instability that demonstrate immune infiltration, suggesting that tumor cells can determine their immune microenvironment. To understand this cross-talk, we analyzed the transcriptome of 91,103 unsorted single cells from 23 Korean and 6 Belgian patients. Cancer cells displayed transcriptional features reminiscent of normal differentiation programs, and genetic alterations that apparently fostered immunosuppressive microenvironments directed by regulatory T cells, myofibroblasts and myeloid cells. Intercellular network reconstruction supported the association between cancer cell signatures and specific stromal or immune cell populations. Our collective view of the cellular landscape and intercellular interactions in colorectal cancer provide mechanistic information for the design of efficient immuno-oncology treatment strategies.
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