A single-cell atlas enables mapping of homeostatic cellular shifts in the adult human breast

Austin D. Reed,Sara Pensa, Adi Steif, Jack Stenning,Daniel J. Kunz,Linsey J. Porter, Kui Hua,Peng He, Alecia-Jane Twigger, Abigail J. Q. Siu,Katarzyna Kania, Rachel Barrow-McGee, Iain Goulding, Jennifer J. Gomm,Valerie Speirs,J. Louise Jones,John C. Marioni,Walid T. Khaled

NATURE GENETICS(2024)

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摘要
Here we use single-cell RNA sequencing to compile a human breast cell atlas assembled from 55 donors that had undergone reduction mammoplasties or risk reduction mastectomies. From more than 800,000 cells we identified 41 cell subclusters across the epithelial, immune and stromal compartments. The contribution of these different clusters varied according to the natural history of the tissue. Age, parity and germline mutations, known to modulate the risk of developing breast cancer, affected the homeostatic cellular state of the breast in different ways. We found that immune cells from BRCA1 or BRCA2 carriers had a distinct gene expression signature indicative of potential immune exhaustion, which was validated by immunohistochemistry. This suggests that immune-escape mechanisms could manifest in non-cancerous tissues very early during tumor initiation. This atlas is a rich resource that can be used to inform novel approaches for early detection and prevention of breast cancer. Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis of over 800,000 human adult breast cells from 55 female donors identifies 41 cell subtypes and highlights age- and parity-dependent effects. Samples from healthy women with germline mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 showed signs of T cell exhaustion.
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