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108


Cooperation between melanoma cell states promotes metastasis through heterotypic cluster formation

Campbell, Nathaniel R; Rao, Anjali; Hunter, Miranda V; Sznurkowska, Magdalena K; Briker, Luzia; Zhang, Maomao; Baron, Maayan; Heilmann, Silja; Deforet, Maxime; Kenny, Colin; Ferretti, Lorenza P; Huang, Ting-Hsiang; Perlee, Sarah; Garg, Manik; Nsengimana, Jérémie; Saini, Massimo; Montal, Emily; Tagore, Mohita; Newton-Bishop, Julia; Middleton, Mark R; Corrie, Pippa; Adams, David J; Rabbie, Roy; Aceto, Nicola; Levesque, Mitchell P; Cornell, Robert A; Yanai, Itai; Xavier, Joao B; White, Richard M
Melanomas can have multiple coexisting cell states, including proliferative (PRO) versus invasive (INV) subpopulations that represent a "go or grow" trade-off; however, how these populations interact is poorly understood. Using a combination of zebrafish modeling and analysis of patient samples, we show that INV and PRO cells form spatially structured heterotypic clusters and cooperate in the seeding of metastasis, maintaining cell state heterogeneity. INV cells adhere tightly to each other and form clusters with a rim of PRO cells. Intravital imaging demonstrated cooperation in which INV cells facilitate dissemination of less metastatic PRO cells. We identified the TFAP2 neural crest transcription factor as a master regulator of clustering and PRO/INV states. Isolation of clusters from patients with metastatic melanoma revealed a subset with heterotypic PRO-INV clusters. Our data suggest a framework for the co-existence of these two divergent cell populations, in which heterotypic clusters promote metastasis via cell-cell cooperation.
PMCID:8551056
PMID: 34529939
ISSN: 1878-1551
CID: 5061372

Cancer cell states and emergent properties of the dynamic tumor system

Barkley, Dalia; Rao, Anjali; Pour, Maayan; França, Gustavo S; Yanai, Itai
Phenotypic heterogeneity within malignant cells of a tumor is emerging as a key property of tumorigenesis. Recent work using single-cell transcriptomics has led to the identification of distinct cancer cell states across a range of cancer types, but their functional relevance and the advantage that they provide to the tumor as a system remain elusive. We present here a definition of cancer cell states in terms of coherently and differentially expressed gene modules and review the origins, dynamics, and impact of states on the tumor system as a whole. The spectrum of cell states taken on by a malignant population may depend on cellular lineage, epigenetic history, genetic mutations, or environmental cues, which has implications for the relative stability or plasticity of individual states. Finally, evidence has emerged that malignant cells in different states may cooperate or compete within a tumor niche, thereby providing an evolutionary advantage to the tumor through increased immune evasion, drug resistance, or invasiveness. Uncovering the mechanisms that govern the origin and dynamics of cancer cell states in tumorigenesis may shed light on how heterogeneity contributes to tumor fitness and highlight vulnerabilities that can be exploited for therapy.
PMCID:8494223
PMID: 34599005
ISSN: 1549-5469
CID: 5026982

Exploring tissue architecture using spatial transcriptomics

Rao, Anjali; Barkley, Dalia; França, Gustavo S; Yanai, Itai
Deciphering the principles and mechanisms by which gene activity orchestrates complex cellular arrangements in multicellular organisms has far-reaching implications for research in the life sciences. Recent technological advances in next-generation sequencing- and imaging-based approaches have established the power of spatial transcriptomics to measure expression levels of all or most genes systematically throughout tissue space, and have been adopted to generate biological insights in neuroscience, development and plant biology as well as to investigate a range of disease contexts, including cancer. Similar to datasets made possible by genomic sequencing and population health surveys, the large-scale atlases generated by this technology lend themselves to exploratory data analysis for hypothesis generation. Here we review spatial transcriptomic technologies and describe the repertoire of operations available for paths of analysis of the resulting data. Spatial transcriptomics can also be deployed for hypothesis testing using experimental designs that compare time points or conditions-including genetic or environmental perturbations. Finally, spatial transcriptomic data are naturally amenable to integration with other data modalities, providing an expandable framework for insight into tissue organization.
PMID: 34381231
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 4991052

Novel predictions arise from contradictions [Editorial]

Yanai, Itai; Lercher, Martin
PMCID:8111937
PMID: 33975619
ISSN: 1474-760x
CID: 4867342

The data-hypothesis conversation

Yanai, Itai; Lercher, Martin
PMID: 33568179
ISSN: 1474-760x
CID: 4779842

A molecular handbook for human development

Kuperwaser, Felicia; Yanai, Itai
PMID: 33500582
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 4767222

The Knowledge Machine [Book Review]

Yanai, Itai; Lercher, Martin J.
ISI:000604963800033
ISSN: 0036-8075
CID: 4773392

The Stress-Like Cancer Cell State Is a Consistent Component of Tumorigenesis

Baron, Maayan; Tagore, Mohita; Hunter, Miranda V; Kim, Isabella S; Moncada, Reuben; Yan, Yun; Campbell, Nathaniel R; White, Richard M; Yanai, Itai
Transcriptional profiling of tumors has revealed a stress-like state among the cancer cells with the concerted expression of genes such as fos, jun, and heat-shock proteins, though this has been controversial given possible dissociation-effects associated with single-cell RNA sequencing. Here, we validate the existence of this state using a combination of zebrafish melanoma modeling, spatial transcriptomics, and human samples. We found that the stress-like subpopulation of cancer cells is present from the early stages of tumorigenesis. Comparing with previously reported single-cell RNA sequencing datasets from diverse cancer types, including triple-negative breast cancer, oligodendroglioma, and pancreatic adenocarcinoma, indicated the conservation of this state during tumorigenesis. We also provide evidence that this state has higher tumor-seeding capabilities and that its induction leads to increased growth under both MEK and BRAF inhibitors. Collectively, our study supports the stress-like cells as a cancer cell state expressing a coherent set of genes and exhibiting drug-resistance properties.
PMID: 32910905
ISSN: 2405-4720
CID: 4589462

A hypothesis is a liability [Editorial]

Yanai, Itai; Lercher, Martin
PMID: 32883349
ISSN: 1474-760x
CID: 4583502

Gene expression dynamics are a proxy for selective pressures on alternatively polyadenylated isoforms

Levin, Michal; Zalts, Harel; Mostov, Natalia; Hashimshony, Tamar; Yanai, Itai
Alternative polyadenylation (APA) produces isoforms with distinct 3'-ends, yet their functional differences remain largely unknown. Here, we introduce the APA-seq method to detect the expression levels of APA isoforms from 3'-end RNA-Seq data by exploiting both paired-end reads for gene isoform identification and quantification. We detected the expression levels of APA isoforms in individual Caenorhabditis elegans embryos at different stages throughout embryogenesis. Examining the correlation between the temporal profiles of isoforms led us to distinguish two classes of genes: those with highly correlated isoforms (HCI) and those with lowly correlated isoforms (LCI) across time. We hypothesized that variants with similar expression profiles may be the product of biological noise, while the LCI variants may be under tighter selection and consequently their distinct 3' UTR isoforms are more likely to have functional consequences. Supporting this notion, we found that LCI genes have significantly more miRNA binding sites, more correlated expression profiles with those of their targeting miRNAs and a relative lack of correspondence between their transcription and protein abundances. Collectively, our results suggest that a lack of coherence among the regulation of 3' UTR isoforms is a proxy for selective pressures acting upon APA usage and consequently for their functional relevance.
PMID: 32421815
ISSN: 1362-4962
CID: 4443812