Metabolites (Sep 2021)

Lipidomic Typing of Colorectal Cancer Tissue Containing Tumour-Infiltrating Lymphocytes by MALDI Mass Spectrometry Imaging

  • Vanna Denti,
  • Allia Mahajneh,
  • Giulia Capitoli,
  • Francesca Clerici,
  • Isabella Piga,
  • Lisa Pagani,
  • Clizia Chinello,
  • Maddalena Maria Bolognesi,
  • Giuseppe Paglia,
  • Stefania Galimberti,
  • Fulvio Magni,
  • Andrew Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11090599
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 599

Abstract

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Predicting the prognosis of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients remains challenging and a characterisation of the tumour immune environment represents one of the most crucial avenues when attempting to do so. For this reason, molecular approaches which are capable of classifying the immune environments associated with tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are being readily investigated. In this proof of concept study, we aim to explore the feasibility of using spatial lipidomics by MALDI-MSI to distinguish CRC tissue based upon their TIL content. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue from human thymus and tonsil was first analysed by MALDI-MSI to obtain a curated mass list from a pool of single positive T lymphocytes, whose putative identities were annotated using an LC-MS-based lipidomic approach. A CRC tissue microarray (TMA, n = 30) was then investigated to determine whether these cases could be distinguished based upon their TIL content in the tumour and its microenvironment. MALDI-MSI from the pool of mature T lymphocytes resulted in the generation of a curated mass list containing 18 annotated m/z features. Initially, subsets of T lymphocytes were then distinguished based on their state of maturation and differentiation in the human thymus and tonsil tissue. Then, when applied to a CRC TMA containing differing amounts of T lymphocyte infiltration, those cases with a high TIL content were distinguishable from those with a lower TIL content, especially within the tumour microenvironment, with three lipid signals being shown to have the greatest impact on this separation (p < 0.05). On the whole, this preliminary study represents a promising starting point and suggests that a lipidomics MALDI-MSI approach could be a promising tool for subtyping the diverse immune environments in CRC.

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