Dissecting the cellular architecture of breast cancer brain metastases reveals prognostically distinct immune landscapes [snRNA-Seq]
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM) are a severe condition with high demand for improved personalized treatment, but a comprehensive understanding of BCBM immune-microenvironment heterogeneity and susceptibility to immunotherapy is lacking. Here, we multimodally profile the immune niche in a vast, clinically well-annotated cohort of 156 BCBM applying tissue cytometry, bulk and single nuclei RNA-sequencing, flow cytometry, and spatial transcriptomics, complemented by functional studies in patient-derived models. Integrative analyses reveal two immune landscapes predicting prolonged patient survival and not deducible from paired primary tumors: 1) BCBM with a high proportion of CD8 tissue-resident-like memory T cells as major players of tumor immune control. 2) BCBM containing tertiary lymphoid structures. Surrogate signatures of these landscapes are prognostic in independent BCBM and primary breast cancer cohorts, are associated with fewer metastases, and predict immunotherapy response. Our work provides critical insights into anti-tumor immunity in BCBM and identifies novel biomarkers with translational relevance.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
PROVIDER: GSE324453 | GEO | 2026/03/10
REPOSITORIES: GEO
ACCESS DATA