<p>Supratentorial ependymomas are aggressive childhood brain cancers that retain features of neurodevelopmental cell types<sup><CitationRef CitationID="CR1">1</CitationRef></sup> and segregate into molecularly and clinically distinct subgroups<sup><CitationRef CitationID="CR2">2</CitationRef>,<CitationRef CitationID="CR3">3</CitationRef></sup>, suggesting different developmental roots. The developmental signatures, as well as microenvironmental factors, underlying aberrant cellular transformation and behaviour across each supratentorial ependymoma subgroup are unclear. Here we integrated single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, as well as in vitro and in vivo live-cell imaging, to define supratentorial ependymoma cell states, spatial organization and dynamic behaviour within the neural microenvironment. We find that individual tumour subgroups have two distinct progenitor-like cell states—neuroepithelial-like and embryonic-like—that are reminiscent of early human brain development and diverge in the extent of their&#xa0;neuronal or ependymal differentiation. We further identify several modes of spatial organization of these tumours, including a high-order architecture that is influenced by mesenchymal and hypoxia signatures, and local neighbourhood structures. Finally, we identify a role for brain-resident cells in shifting supratentorial ependymoma cellular heterogeneity towards neuronal-like cells that co-opt immature neuronal morphology and migratory mechanisms, and a subset of neuroepithelial-like cells that are both proliferative and highly migratory. Collectively, these findings provide a multidimensional framework to integrate transcriptional and phenotypic characterization of tumour heterogeneity in supratentorial ependymoma and its potential clinical implications.</p>

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Multidimensional profiling of heterogeneity in supratentorial ependymomas

  • Daeun Jeong,
  • Sara G. Danielli,
  • Kendra K. Maaß,
  • David R. Ghasemi,
  • Svenja K. Tetzlaff,
  • Ekin Reyhan,
  • Li Jiang,
  • Shashank Katiyar,
  • Julia K. Sundheimer,
  • Costanza Lo Cascio,
  • Sina Neyazi,
  • Carlos Alberto Oliveira de Biagi-Junior,
  • Elsa Couvillon,
  • Sophia Castellani,
  • Maria Pazyra-Murphy,
  • Matthew Mullally,
  • Marc Philipp Dehler,
  • Bernhard Englinger,
  • Andrezza Nascimento,
  • Gustavo Alencastro Veiga Cruzeiro,
  • Joana G. Marques,
  • Rebecca D. Haase,
  • Cuong M. Nguyen,
  • Alicia-Christina Baumgartner,
  • Jacob S. Rozowsky,
  • Olivia A. Hack,
  • McKenzie L. Shaw,
  • Daniela Lotsch-Gojo,
  • Katharina Bruckner,
  • Andrey Korshunov,
  • Stefan M. Pfister,
  • Marcel Kool,
  • Tomasz J. Nowakowski,
  • Johannes Gojo,
  • Lissa Baird,
  • Sanda Alexandrescu,
  • Kristian W. Pajtler,
  • Varun Venkataramani,
  • Mariella G. Filbin

摘要

Supratentorial ependymomas are aggressive childhood brain cancers that retain features of neurodevelopmental cell types1 and segregate into molecularly and clinically distinct subgroups2,3, suggesting different developmental roots. The developmental signatures, as well as microenvironmental factors, underlying aberrant cellular transformation and behaviour across each supratentorial ependymoma subgroup are unclear. Here we integrated single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, as well as in vitro and in vivo live-cell imaging, to define supratentorial ependymoma cell states, spatial organization and dynamic behaviour within the neural microenvironment. We find that individual tumour subgroups have two distinct progenitor-like cell states—neuroepithelial-like and embryonic-like—that are reminiscent of early human brain development and diverge in the extent of their neuronal or ependymal differentiation. We further identify several modes of spatial organization of these tumours, including a high-order architecture that is influenced by mesenchymal and hypoxia signatures, and local neighbourhood structures. Finally, we identify a role for brain-resident cells in shifting supratentorial ependymoma cellular heterogeneity towards neuronal-like cells that co-opt immature neuronal morphology and migratory mechanisms, and a subset of neuroepithelial-like cells that are both proliferative and highly migratory. Collectively, these findings provide a multidimensional framework to integrate transcriptional and phenotypic characterization of tumour heterogeneity in supratentorial ependymoma and its potential clinical implications.