作者
Wenying Wang,Tianran Li,Yue Cheng,Fei Li,Shuhong Qi,Min Mao,Jingjing Wu,Qing Liu,Xiaoning Zhang,Xuegang Li,Lu Zhang,Haoyue Qi,Yang Lan,Kaidi Yang,Zhicheng He,Shuaishuai Ding,Zhongyi Qin,Ying Yang,Xi Yang,Chunhua Luo,Ying Guo,Yan Wang,Xindong Liu,L. Zhou,Yuqi Liu,Weikai Kong,Jingya Miao,Shuang-Hui Ye,Min Luo,Lele An,Lujing Wang,Linrong Che,Qin Niu,Qinghua Ma,Xia Zhang,Zhihong Zhang,Rong Hu,Hua Feng,Yi‐Fang Ping,Xiu‐Wu Bian,Yu Shi
摘要
Monocyte-derived tumor-associated macrophages (Mo-TAMs) intensively infiltrate diffuse gliomas with remarkable heterogeneity. Using single-cell transcriptomics, we chart a spatially resolved transcriptional landscape of Mo-TAMs across 51 patients with isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-wild-type glioblastomas or IDH-mutant gliomas. We characterize a Mo-TAM subset that is localized to the peri-necrotic niche and skewed by hypoxic niche cues to acquire a hypoxia response signature. Hypoxia-TAM destabilizes endothelial adherens junctions by activating adrenomedullin paracrine signaling, thereby stimulating a hyperpermeable neovasculature that hampers drug delivery in glioblastoma xenografts. Accordingly, genetic ablation or pharmacological blockade of adrenomedullin produced by Hypoxia-TAM restores vascular integrity, improves intratumoral concentration of the anti-tumor agent dabrafenib, and achieves combinatorial therapeutic benefits. Increased proportion of Hypoxia-TAM or adrenomedullin expression is predictive of tumor vessel hyperpermeability and a worse prognosis of glioblastoma. Our findings highlight Mo-TAM diversity and spatial niche-steered Mo-TAM reprogramming in diffuse gliomas and indicate potential therapeutics targeting Hypoxia-TAM to normalize tumor vasculature.