Resolving the spatial architecture of myeloma and its microenvironment at the single-cell level
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Published:2023-08-17
Issue:1
Volume:14
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
John LukasORCID, Poos Alexandra M., Brobeil Alexander, Schinke CarolinaORCID, Huhn Stefanie, Prokoph Nina, Lutz Raphael, Wagner Barbara, Zangari Maurizio, Tirier Stephan M., Mallm Jan-Philipp, Schumacher SabrinaORCID, Vonficht Dominik, Solé-Boldo Llorenç, Quick Sabine, Steiger SimonORCID, Przybilla Moritz J., Bauer Katharina, Baumann Anja, Hemmer Stefan, Rehnitz Christoph, Lückerath Christian, Sachpekidis Christos, Mechtersheimer Gunhild, Haberkorn Uwe, Dimitrakopoulou-Strauss Antonia, Reichert Philipp, Barlogie Bart, Müller-Tidow CarstenORCID, Goldschmidt HartmutORCID, Hillengass JensORCID, Rasche LeoORCID, Haas Simon F., van Rhee FritsORCID, Rippe KarstenORCID, Raab Marc S.ORCID, Sauer Sandra, Weinhold NielsORCID
Abstract
AbstractIn multiple myeloma spatial differences in the subclonal architecture, molecular signatures and composition of the microenvironment remain poorly characterized. To address this shortcoming, we perform multi-region sequencing on paired random bone marrow and focal lesion samples from 17 newly diagnosed patients. Using single-cell RNA- and ATAC-seq we find a median of 6 tumor subclones per patient and unique subclones in focal lesions. Genetically identical subclones display different levels of spatial transcriptional plasticity, including nearly identical profiles and pronounced heterogeneity at different sites, which can include differential expression of immunotherapy targets, such as CD20 and CD38. Macrophages are significantly depleted in the microenvironment of focal lesions. We observe proportional changes in the T-cell repertoire but no site-specific expansion of T-cell clones in intramedullary lesions. In conclusion, our results demonstrate the relevance of considering spatial heterogeneity in multiple myeloma with potential implications for models of cell-cell interactions and disease progression.
Funder
Dietmar Hopp Stiftung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary
Reference72 articles.
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