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Basal-to-inflammatory transition and tumor resistance via crosstalk with a pro-inflammatory stromal niche

Author

Listed:
  • Nancy Yanzhe Li

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Weiruo Zhang

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Daniel Haensel

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Anna R. Jussila

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Cory Pan

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Sadhana Gaddam

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Sylvia K. Plevritis

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

  • Anthony E. Oro

    (Stanford University School of Medicine)

Abstract

Cancer-associated inflammation is a double-edged sword possessing both pro- and anti-tumor properties through ill-defined tumor-immune dynamics. While we previously identified a carcinoma tumor-intrinsic resistance pathway, basal-to-squamous cell carcinoma transition, here, employing a multipronged single-cell and spatial-omics approach, we identify an inflammation and therapy-enriched tumor state we term basal-to-inflammatory transition. Basal-to-inflammatory transition signature correlates with poor overall patient survival in many epithelial tumors. Basal-to-squamous cell carcinoma transition and basal-to-inflammatory transition occur in adjacent but distinct regions of a single tumor: basal-to-squamous cell carcinoma transition arises within the core tumor nodule, while basal-to-inflammatory transition emerges from a specialized inflammatory environment defined by a tumor-associated TREM1 myeloid signature. TREM1 myeloid-derived cytokines IL1 and OSM induce basal-to-inflammatory transition in vitro and in vivo through NF-κB, lowering sensitivity of patient basal cell carcinoma explant tumors to Smoothened inhibitor treatment. This work deepens our knowledge of the heterogeneous local tumor microenvironment and nominates basal-to-inflammatory transition as a drug-resistant but targetable tumor state driven by a specialized inflammatory microenvironment.

Suggested Citation

  • Nancy Yanzhe Li & Weiruo Zhang & Daniel Haensel & Anna R. Jussila & Cory Pan & Sadhana Gaddam & Sylvia K. Plevritis & Anthony E. Oro, 2024. "Basal-to-inflammatory transition and tumor resistance via crosstalk with a pro-inflammatory stromal niche," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-21, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:15:y:2024:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-024-52394-3
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52394-3
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