Spatiotemporal dynamics of tumor microenvironment remodeling

Autor/innen

  • Kamil Lisek
  • Ilan Theurillat
  • Tancredi Massimo Pentimalli
  • Svea Beier
  • Daniel León-Periñán
  • Anna Antonatou
  • Serafima Dubnov
  • Marion Müller
  • Florian Hubl
  • Artemis Xhuri
  • Hanna Romanowicz
  • Beata Smolarz
  • Elodie Montaudon
  • Sandra Raimundo
  • Anca Margineanu
  • Marie Schott
  • Séverine Kunz
  • Elisabetta Marangoni
  • Nikos Karaiskos
  • Mor Nitzan
  • Walter Birchmeier
  • Nikolaus Rajewsky

Journal

  • bioRxiv

Quellenangabe

  • bioRxiv

Zusammenfassung

  • During tumorigenesis, interactions between tumor and stromal cells progressively remodel the tumor microenvironment (TME) towards pro-tumoral functions. Understanding early TME remodeling dynamics is therefore crucial for developing interceptive therapies. However, clinical samples typically provide isolated, late tumorigenesis snapshots. To overcome this limitation, we generated triple-negative breast cancer mice that develop multifocal, asynchronous tumors along a continuous luminal-to-basal transdifferentiation trajectory. Ordering spatial transcriptomes from 100+ ducts along this trajectory reveals the spatiotemporal dynamics of TME remodeling and underlying molecular mechanisms. Cancer-associated myofibroblasts (myCAFs) emerge as key players in advanced tumors, where they orchestrate pro-invasive remodeling of the tumor-stromal interface. myCAFs are conserved in patient-derived xenograft models and steer tumor trajectories towards invasive phenotypes when co-injected with tumor cells in syngeneic mice. Our study shows that temporal ordering of spatially-resolved disease snapshots unravels some of the molecular “forces” that, starting from the cell-of-origin, propel cells/microenvironments along a disease trajectory.


DOI

doi:10.1101/2025.07.15.662972