Longitudinal profiling of tumor and immune compartments uncovers patterns of dysregulation and associations with response in multiple myeloma
作者
Denis J Ohlstrom,WILLIAM C. PILCHER,Marina E Michaud,Chaitanya Acharya,Sarthak Satpathy,Edgar Gonzalez-Kozlova,Reyka G Jayasinghe,Katherine Ferguson,Hope L Mumme,Shivani Nanda,Yizhe Song,Sowmitri Mantrala,Dimitra Karagkouni,Jessica Schulman,Nick Pabustan,Júnia Vieira dos Santos,Daniel W. Sherbenou,Jonathan J Keats,Alexander M. Gout,Steven Foltz
Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) is a malignancy of clonally expanded plasma cells shaped by complex interactions with the immune microenvironment. To investigate immune correlates of treatment response and disease progression, we conducted multi-omics profiling including CD138neg single-cell RNA sequencing of 243 bone marrow samples from 102 patients (631,226 cells) and CD138pos bulk RNA and whole-genome sequencing from 209 samples. In longitudinal analyses, interferon-γ signaling associated with markers of impaired T cell memory after autologous stem cell transplant, while naïve B cell abundance and immunoglobulin diversity correlated with improved progression-free survival (HR = 0.48, p = 2.3e-4). At disease progression, MM cells upregulated cancer-testis antigens and immune effector genes, with concurrent B cell depletion, enrichment of myeloid-derived suppressor cell expression, and phenotypic T-cell exhaustion. These findings highlight dynamic immune-tumor interactions, identifying naïve B cell reconstitution as a biomarker of durable response, and cancer-testis antigens as potential targets for high-risk disease at progression.