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This record contains data related to article "Morphology of tumor-associated macrophages as a correlate of metabolism with prognostic significance in colorectal liver metastases" Abstract It has long been known that in vitro polarized macrophages differ in morphology. Stemming from a conventional immunohistology observation, we set out to test the hypothesis that morphology of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in colorectal liver metastasis (CLM) represents a correlate of functional diversity with prognostic significance. Density and morphological metrics of TAMs were measured and correlated with clinicopathological variables. While density of TAMs did not correlate with survival of CLM patients, the cell area identified small (S-TAM) and large (L-TAM) macrophages that were associated with 5-yr disease-free survival rates of 27.8% and 0.2%, respectively (P < 0.0001). RNA sequencing of morphologically distinct macrophages identified LXR/RXR as the most enriched pathway in large macrophages, with upregulation of genes involved in cholesterol metabolism, scavenger receptors, MERTK, and complement. In single-cell analysis of mononuclear phagocytes from CLM tissues, S-TAM and L-TAM signatures were differentially enriched in individual clusters. These results suggest that morphometric characterization can serve as a simple readout of TAM diversity with strong prognostic significance.
This record contains data related to the article "Morphology of tumor-associated macrophages as a correlate of metabolism with prognostic significance in colorectal liver metastases" funded by Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro grant number AIRC 5x1000 IG-21147
colo-rectal metastasis, prognosis, single-cell, macrophages
colo-rectal metastasis, prognosis, single-cell, macrophages
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