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Spatial analysis reveals targetable macrophage-mediated mechanisms of immune evasion in hepatocellular carcinoma minimal residual disease.

Lea LemaitreNia AdenijiAkanksha SureshReshma ReguramJosephine ZhangJangho ParkAmit ReddyAlexandro E TrevinoAaron T MayerAnja DeutzmannAida S HansenLing TongVinodhini ArjunanNeeraja KambhamBrendan C VisserMonica M DuaC Andrew BonhamNishita KotharyH Blaize D'AngioRyan PreskaYanay RosenJames Y ZouVivek CharuDean W FelsherRenumathy Dhanasekaran
Published in: Nature cancer (2024)
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) frequently recurs from minimal residual disease (MRD), which persists after therapy. Here, we identified mechanisms of persistence of residual tumor cells using post-chemoembolization human HCC (n = 108 patients, 1.07 million cells) and a transgenic mouse model of MRD. Through single-cell high-plex cytometric imaging, we identified a spatial neighborhood within which PD-L1 + M2-like macrophages interact with stem-like tumor cells, correlating with CD8 + T cell exhaustion and poor survival. Further, through spatial transcriptomics of residual HCC, we showed that macrophage-derived TGFβ1 mediates the persistence of stem-like tumor cells. Last, we demonstrate that combined blockade of Pdl1 and Tgfβ excluded immunosuppressive macrophages, recruited activated CD8 + T cells and eliminated residual stem-like tumor cells in two mouse models: a transgenic model of MRD and a syngeneic orthotopic model of doxorubicin-resistant HCC. Thus, our spatial analyses reveal that PD-L1 + macrophages sustain MRD by activating the TGFβ pathway in stem-like cancer cells and targeting this interaction may prevent HCC recurrence from MRD.
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