Investigator

Judith Agudo

Associate Professor · Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Cancer Immunology and Virology

JAJudith Agudo
Papers(1)
Multimodal Spatial Pr…
Collaborators(10)
Juliann B. TefftMariana Lopez LeonNatalie ShihNikolaus SchultzPeter K. SorgerRitika KundraRonny DrapkinRoxanne J. PelletierSabrina ChanSandro Santagata
Institutions(6)
Dana Farber Cancer In…Unknown InstitutionUniversity Of Pennsyl…Memorial Sloan Ketter…Harvard Medical SchoolBrigham and Women's H…

Papers

Multimodal Spatial Profiling Reveals Immune Suppression and Microenvironment Remodeling in Fallopian Tube Precursors to High-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma

Abstract High-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) originates from fallopian tube (FT) precursors. However, the molecular changes that occur as precancerous lesions progress to HGSOC are not well understood. To address this, we integrated high-plex imaging and spatial transcriptomics to analyze human tissue samples at different stages of HGSOC development, including p53 signatures, serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas (STIC), and invasive HGSOC. Our findings reveal immune modulating mechanisms within precursor epithelium, characterized by chromosomal instability, persistent IFN signaling, and dysregulated innate and adaptive immunity. FT precursors display elevated expression of MHC class I, including HLA-E, and IFN-stimulated genes, typically linked to later-stage tumorigenesis. These molecular alterations coincide with progressive shifts in the tumor microenvironment, transitioning from immune surveillance in early STICs to immune suppression in advanced STICs and cancer. These insights identify potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets for HGSOC interception and clarify the molecular transitions from precancer to cancer. Significance: This study maps the immune response in FT precursors of HGSOC, highlighting localized IFN signaling, chromosomal instability, and competing immune surveillance and suppression along the progression axis. It provides an explorable public spatial profiling atlas for investigating precancer mechanisms, biomarkers, and early detection and interception strategies. See related commentary by Recouvreux and Orsulic, p. 1093

1Works
1Papers
28Collaborators
Tumor MicroenvironmentNeoplasmsCell Line, TumorOvarian NeoplasmsCystadenocarcinoma, SerousFallopian Tube NeoplasmsBiomarkers, TumorTumor Escape

Positions

2017–

Associate Professor

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute · Cancer Immunology and Virology

2010–

Postdoctoral Fellow

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai · Immunology

2008–

Postdoctoral Fellow

Autonomous University of Barcelona · CIBERDEM

2006–

Lecturer

Autonomous University of Barcelona · Department of Biochemistry

Education

2008

Ph.D.

Autonomous University of Barcelona · Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

2003

B.S.

Autonomous University of Barcelona · Cellular Biology