Single-cell Profiling Uncovers a Muc4- Expressing Metaplastic Gastric Cell Type Sustained by Helicobacter pylori-driven Inflammation

2Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Mechanisms for Helicobacter pylori (Hp)-driven stomach cancer are not fully understood. In a transgenic mouse model of gastric preneoplasia, concomitant Hp infection and induction of constitutively active KRAS (Hp+KRAS+) alters metaplasia phenotypes and elicits greater inflammation than either perturbation alone. Gastric single-cell RNA sequencing showed that Hp+KRAS+ mice had a large population of metaplastic pit cells that expressed the intestinal mucin Muc and the growth factor amphiregulin. Flow cytometry and IHC-based immune profiling revealed that metaplastic pit cells were associated with macrophage and T-cell inflammation. Accordingly, expansion of metaplastic pit cells was prevented by gastric immunosuppression and reversed by antibiotic eradication of Hp. Finally, MUC4 expression was significantly associated with proliferation in human gastric cancer samples. These studies identify an Hp-associated metaplastic pit cell lineage, also found in human gastric cancer tissues, whose expansion is driven by Hp-dependent inflammation. Significance:Using a mousemodel,we have delineatedmetaplastic pit cells as a precancerous cell type whose expansion requires Hp-driven inflammation. In humans, metaplastic pit cells show enhanced proliferation as well as enrichment in precancer and early cancer tissues, highlighting an early step in the gastric metaplasia to cancer cascade.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

O’Brien, V. P., Kang, Y., Shenoy, M. K., Finak, G., Young, W. C., Dubrulle, J., … Salama, N. R. (2023). Single-cell Profiling Uncovers a Muc4- Expressing Metaplastic Gastric Cell Type Sustained by Helicobacter pylori-driven Inflammation. Cancer Research Communications, 3(9), 1756–1769. https://doi.org/10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-23-0142

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free