4.8 Article

Dissecting the multicellular ecosystem of metastatic melanoma by single-cell RNA-seq

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 352, Issue 6282, Pages 189-196

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aad0501

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute (NCI) [P01CA163222, R35CA197737]
  2. Dr. Miriam and Sheldon Adelson Medical Research Foundation
  3. Melanoma Research Alliance
  4. Ludwig Center at Harvard Medical School
  5. Howard Hughes Medicine Institute
  6. Klarman Cell Observatory
  7. STARR Cancer Consortium
  8. NCI [1U24CA180922, K99CA194163]
  9. Koch Institute from NCI [P30-CA14051]
  10. Broad Institute
  11. Searle Scholars Program
  12. Beckman Young Investigator Program
  13. NIH [DP2 OD020839, P50GM107618]
  14. Wong Family Award for Translational Oncology of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  15. Human Frontier Science Program long-term fellowship, a Rothschild fellowship
  16. Integrative Cancer Biology Program grant [U54CA112962]
  17. Next Generation Fund at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
  18. NSF Graduate Research Fellowships Program
  19. Ludwig Center at Harvard

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To explore the distinct genotypic and phenotypic states of melanoma tumors, we applied single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to 4645 single cells isolated from 19 patients, profiling malignant, immune, stromal, and endothelial cells. Malignant cells within the same tumor displayed transcriptional heterogeneity associated with the cell cycle, spatial context, and a drug-resistance program. In particular, all tumors harbored malignant cells from two distinct transcriptional cell states, such that tumors characterized by high levels of the MITF transcription factor also contained cells with low MITF and elevated levels of the AXL kinase. Single-cell analyses suggested distinct tumor microenvironmental patterns, including cell-to-cell interactions. Analysis of tumor-infiltrating T cells revealed exhaustion programs, their connection to T cell activation and clonal expansion, and their variability across patients. Overall, we begin to unravel the cellular ecosystem of tumors and how single-cell genomics offers insights with implications for both targeted and immune therapies.

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