Back to Search Start Over

Data from Analysis of Donor Pancreata Defines the Transcriptomic Signature and Microenvironment of Early Neoplastic Lesions

Authors :
Marina Pasca di Magliano
Timothy L. Frankel
Jiaqi Shi
Filip Bednar
Arvind Rao
Vaibhav Sahai
Valerie Gunchick
Nicole Peterson
Chin-Tung Chen
Nicholas Olden
Christopher J. Sonnenday
Meredith Barrett
Carlos E. Espinoza
Stephanie The
Michael Mattea
Hannah R. Watkoske
Danyah Alomari
Allison C. Bischoff
Wenting Du
Katelyn L. Donahue
Fatima Lima
Sarah Nelson
Jacob Edwards
Yaqing Zhang
Brian D. Griffith
Jake McGue
Jay Li
Padma Kadiyala
Ahmed M. Elhossiny
Eileen S. Carpenter
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

The adult healthy human pancreas has been poorly studied given the lack of indication to obtain tissue from the pancreas in the absence of disease and rapid postmortem degradation. We obtained pancreata from brain dead donors, thus avoiding any warm ischemia time. The 30 donors were diverse in age and race and had no known pancreas disease. Histopathologic analysis of the samples revealed pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) lesions in most individuals irrespective of age. Using a combination of multiplex IHC, single-cell RNA sequencing, and spatial transcriptomics, we provide the first-ever characterization of the unique microenvironment of the adult human pancreas and of sporadic PanIN lesions. We compared healthy pancreata to pancreatic cancer and peritumoral tissue and observed distinct transcriptomic signatures in fibroblasts and, to a lesser extent, macrophages. PanIN epithelial cells from healthy pancreata were remarkably transcriptionally similar to cancer cells, suggesting that neoplastic pathways are initiated early in tumorigenesis.Significance:Precursor lesions to pancreatic cancer are poorly characterized. We analyzed donor pancreata and discovered that precursor lesions are detected at a much higher rate than the incidence of pancreatic cancer, setting the stage for efforts to elucidate the microenvironmental and cell-intrinsic factors that restrain or, conversely, promote malignant progression.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....260ee69ee57860896d40af7361746e9f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6651113.v1