Single-cell and spatial transcriptome characterize coinhibitory cell-cell communications during histological progression of lung adenocarcinoma

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Lung adenocarcinoma, a prevalent and lethal malignancy globally, is characterized by significant tumor heterogeneity and a complex tumor immune microenvironment during its histologic pattern progression. Understanding the intricate interplay between tumor and immune cells is of paramount importance as it could potentially pave the way for the development of effective therapeutic strategies for lung adenocar-cinoma. In this study, we run comparative analysis of the single-cell transcriptomic data derived from tumor tissues exhibiting four distinct histologic patterns, lepidic, papillary, acinar and solid, in lung adeno-carcinoma. Our analysis unveiled several co-inhibitory receptor-ligand interactions, including PD1-PDL1, PVR-TIGIT and TIGIT-NECTIN2, that potentially exert a pivotal role in recruiting immunosuppressive cells such as M2 macrophages and Tregs into LUAD tumor, thereby establishing immunosuppressive microenvironment and inducing T cells to exhaustion state. Furthermore, The expression level of these co-inhibitory factors, such as NECTIN2 and PVR, were strongly correlated with low immune infiltration, unfavorable patient clinical outcomes and limited efficacy of immunotherapy. Furthermore, we conducted immunofluorescence assay and spatial transcriptomic sequencing to validated the spatial co-localization of typical co-inhibitory factors. We believe this study provides valuable insights into the heterogeneity of molecular, cellular interactions leading to immunosuppressive microenvironment during the histological progression of lung adenocarcinoma. The findings could facilitate the development of novel immunotherapy for lung cancer.

Article activity feed