Spatially Segregated Macrophage Populations Predict Distinct Outcomes in Colon Cancer

Author:

Matusiak Magdalena1ORCID,Hickey John W.1ORCID,van IJzendoorn David G.P.1ORCID,Lu Guolan1ORCID,Kidziński Lukasz2ORCID,Zhu Shirley1ORCID,Colburg Deana R.C.1ORCID,Luca Bogdan34ORCID,Phillips Darci J.1ORCID,Brubaker Sky W.5ORCID,Charville Gregory W.1ORCID,Shen Jeanne1ORCID,Loh Kyle M.67ORCID,Okwan-Duodu Derick K.1ORCID,Nolan Garry P.1ORCID,Newman Aaron M.478ORCID,West Robert B.1ORCID,van de Rijn Matt1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 1

2. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 4

3. Department of Medicine, Stanford Center for Biomedical Informatics Research, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 2

4. Department of Biomedical Data Science, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 3

5. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 5

6. Department of Developmental Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 6

7. Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 7

8. Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University, Stanford, California. 8

Abstract

Abstract Tumor-associated macrophages are transcriptionally heterogeneous, but the spatial distribution and cell interactions that shape macrophage tissue roles remain poorly characterized. Here, we spatially resolve five distinct human macrophage populations in normal and malignant human breast and colon tissue and reveal their cellular associations. This spatial map reveals that distinct macrophage populations reside in spatially segregated micro-environmental niches with conserved cellular compositions that are repeated across healthy and diseased tissue. We show that IL4I1+ macrophages phagocytose dying cells in areas with high cell turnover and predict good outcome in colon cancer. In contrast, SPP1+ macrophages are enriched in hypoxic and necrotic tumor regions and portend worse outcome in colon cancer. A subset of FOLR2+ macrophages is embedded in plasma cell niches. NLRP3+ macrophages co-localize with neutrophils and activate an inflammasome in tumors. Our findings indicate that a limited number of unique human macrophage niches function as fundamental building blocks in tissue. Significance: This work broadens our understanding of the distinct roles different macrophage populations may exert on cancer growth and reveals potential predictive markers and macrophage population-specific therapy targets.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

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