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The tumor microenvironment shows a hierarchy of cell-cell interactions dominated by fibroblasts.

Shimrit MayerTomer MiloAchinoam IsaacsonCoral HalperinShoval MiyaraYaniv SteinChen LiorMeirav Pevsner-FischerEldad TzahorAvi MayoUri AlonRuth Scherz-Shouval
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The tumor microenvironment (TME) is comprised of non-malignant cells that interact with each other and with cancer cells, critically impacting cancer biology. The TME is complex, and understanding it requires simplifying approaches. Here we provide an experimental-mathematical approach to decompose the TME into small circuits of interacting cell types. We find, using female breast cancer single-cell-RNA-sequencing data, a hierarchical network of interactions, with cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) at the top secreting factors primarily to tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). This network is composed of repeating circuit motifs. We isolate the strongest two-cell circuit motif by culturing fibroblasts and macrophages in-vitro, and analyze their dynamics and transcriptomes. This isolated circuit recapitulates the hierarchy of in-vivo interactions, and enables testing the effect of ligand-receptor interactions on cell dynamics and function, as we demonstrate by identifying a mediator of CAF-TAM interactions - RARRES2, and its receptor CMKLR1. Thus, the complexity of the TME may be simplified by identifying small circuits, facilitating the development of strategies to modulate the TME.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cell death
  • papillary thyroid
  • cell proliferation
  • network analysis