Litcius/Paper detail

Dissection of intratumor microbiome–host interactions at the single-cell level in lung cancer

Yongjing Ma, Yuanchen Sun, Lu Wang, Wanxing Xu, Xiaodan Fan, Jun Ding, Christopher Heeschen, Wenjuan Wu, Xiaoqi Zheng, Ning‐Ning Liu

2024hLife14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The intratumor microbiome , one of the hallmarks of cancer, plays a crucial role in cancer progression through its interaction with the host. However, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, six publicly available single-cell transcriptomic lung cancer datasets (comprising 178 samples) from multiple centers (Shanghai, New York, Seoul) were integrated to investigate the heterogeneity of host–microbiome interactions at the single-cell level using single-cell analysis of host–microbiome interactions (SAHMI). The results indicate that primary tumor tissues have a high proportion of fungi-associated cells, whereas metastatic brain tissues predominantly contain bacteria-associated cells. There are also distinct microbial distributions across cell types. Notably, the presence of specific bacteria significantly influences the transcriptome of resident host cells, including T cells and macrophages, by modulating pathways related to ribosomal RNA (rRNA) processing, cellular responses to stress and stimuli, and RNA and protein metabolism. Finally, specific cell-associated bacteria are significantly correlated with clinical features , such as lung cancer stages and smoking frequency. These single-cell insights into microbiome–host interactions improve current understanding about lung cancer development and progression and offer potential micro-ecological and diagnostic insights.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeDissection (medical)Host (biology)Lung cancerCellCancerBiologyComputational biologyCancer researchMedicinePathologyBioinformaticsGeneticsAnatomyGut microbiota and healthCancer Cells and MetastasisSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomics