Single nuclei and spatial profiling of sacrococcygeal teratomas reveals cellular composition and X inactivation heterogeneity.

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作者:Rojas Ernesto J, Giannikou Krinio, Huang Benjamin J, Cho Soo-Jin, Cordero Marco A, Pena Deion, Vu Lan, Bagrodia Aditya, Derderian S Christopher, MacKenzie Tippi C, Laird Diana J
Sacrococcygeal teratomas (SCTs) are the most common neonatal tumors, yet their cellular origins, clinical stratification, and sex bias-occurring three times more in XX than XY individuals-remain poorly understood. To address these gaps, we examined six postnatal (one male and five female) and two prenatal (both female) SCTs by single nuclei RNA-seq and spatial transcriptomics. We identified five broad cellular lineages in SCTs: stroma, epithelia, endothelia, neuroectoderm, and immune. The transcriptomes and lineage compositions showed significant heterogeneity, which offer a framework for future molecular stratification. SCTs are thought to originate from and be propagated by pluripotent cells, notably however, we did not detect these populations. Among female tumors, a subset of cells exhibited biallelic expression of X-linked genes, consistent with X-inactivation failure or reactivation of the once inactivated X-chromosome. These biallelic cells were enriched for developmental and neuronal programs, whereas cells with single-allelic X-chromosome preferentially expressed immune-related genes. Biallelic X-chromosome activation, which can occur only in female cells, may result in transcriptomic features that favor survival of tumor cells, contributing to the sex bias of SCTs. Our findings reveal a link between X-chromosome inactivation and SCT cell identity, suggesting that X-dosage dysregulation may influence SCT heterogeneity and immune landscape.

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