Welcome! Here, we present our study of immunotherapy-related colitis (ircolitis).
Please read and cite our original research article:
- Thomas MF, Slowikowski K, Manakongtreecheep K, Sen P, Samanta N, Tantivit J, et al. Single-cell transcriptomic analyses reveal distinct immune cell contributions to epithelial barrier dysfunction in checkpoint inhibitor colitis. Nature Medicine. 2024; 1–14. doi:10.1038/s41591-024-02895-x
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Thomas2024-lk, title = "{Single-cell transcriptomic analyses reveal distinct immune cell contributions to epithelial barrier dysfunction in checkpoint inhibitor colitis}", author = "Thomas, Molly Fisher and Slowikowski, Kamil and Manakongtreecheep, Kasidet and Sen, Pritha and Samanta, Nandini and Tantivit, Jessica and Nasrallah, Mazen and Zubiri, Leyre and Smith, Neal P and Tirard, Alice and Ramesh, Swetha and Arnold, Benjamin Y and Nieman, Linda T and Chen, Jonathan H and Eisenhaure, Thomas and Pelka, Karin and Song, Yuhui and Xu, Katherine H and Jorgji, Vjola and Pinto, Christopher J and Sharova, Tatyana and Glasser, Rachel and Chan, Puiyee and Sullivan, Ryan J and Khalili, Hamed and Juric, Dejan and Boland, Genevieve M and Dougan, Michael and Hacohen, Nir and Li, Bo and Reynolds, Kerry L and Villani, Alexandra-Chloé", journal = "Nature Medicine", publisher = "Nature Publishing Group", pages = "1--14", abstract = "Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy has revolutionized oncology, but treatments are limited by immune-related adverse events, including checkpoint inhibitor colitis (irColitis). Little is understood about the pathogenic mechanisms driving irColitis, which does not readily occur in model organisms, such as mice. To define molecular drivers of irColitis, we used single-cell multi-omics to profile approximately 300,000 cells from the colon mucosa and blood of 13 patients with cancer who developed irColitis (nine on anti-PD-1 or anti-CTLA-4 monotherapy and four on dual ICI therapy; most patients had skin or lung cancer), eight controls on ICI therapy and eight healthy controls. Patients with irColitis showed expanded mucosal Tregs, ITGAEHi CD8 tissue-resident memory T cells expressing CXCL13 and Th17 gene programs and recirculating ITGB2Hi CD8 T cells. Cytotoxic GNLYHi CD4 T cells, recirculating ITGB2Hi CD8 T cells and endothelial cells expressing hypoxia gene programs were further expanded in colitis associated with anti-PD-1/CTLA-4 therapy compared to anti-PD-1 therapy. Luminal epithelial cells in patients with irColitis expressed PCSK9, PD-L1 and interferon-induced signatures associated with apoptosis, increased cell turnover and malabsorption. Together, these data suggest roles for circulating T cells and epithelial–immune crosstalk critical to PD-1/CTLA-4-dependent tolerance and barrier function and identify potential therapeutic targets for irColitis. Single-cell multi-omic analysis of 300,000 cells from 29 patients representing peripheral immune cells and colon mucosal immune, epithelial and mesenchymal cells reveals crosstalk between circulating and tissue-resident immune cells with epithelial cells in checkpoint inhibitor colitis and identifies potential therapeutic targets.", month = may, year = 2024, doi = "10.1038/s41591-024-02895-x", issn = "1546-170X,1546-170X", language = "en" }
Cell Clusters
Metadata variables and gene expression in two-dimensional embeddings. Tissue immune cells:
Tissue epithelial and mesenchymal nuclei:
Blood immune cells:
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Gene Contrasts
Differential expression statistics for all genes:
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This repository includes three main folders:
- The R source code for our analyses.
- The output results files from our analyses.
- The HTML, CSS, and Javascript source code for an interactive website to view the data and results.
The raw and processed scRNA-seq gene expression files are available at NCBI GEO GSE206301.
Sequencing reads are available at dbGAP accession phs003418.v1.p1.
Please see analysis/output/README.md for instructions on how to access the files.