Abstract Neutrophils accumulate systemically in tumor-bearing organisms, and have been shown to promote primary tumor progression and metastasis through suppression of the anti-tumor immune response. However, neutrophils have specialized phenotypes in different organs, and their full transcriptional heterogeneity and maturation trajectory has yet to be defined across healthy and cancer states. Here, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing on isolated neutrophils from bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, blood, mammary fat pad/tumor, and lungs from wild-type and breast tumor-bearing MMTV-PyMT mice. Our analysis reveals distinct transcriptional programs which distinguish systemic neutrophil function in normal homeostasis and cancer. In wild-type mice, we describe a neutrophil maturation trajectory that begins with granulopoiesis in the bone marrow, continues development in the spleen and blood, and reaches a fully mature state in the lymph nodes, mammary fat pad, and lungs. This is captured by five maturation stages, N0-N4, each with its own characteristic gene signature. In MMTV-PyMT mice, we observe a systemic upregulation of genes including Ifitm1, Wfdc17, Clec4e, Igfbp6, and Saac, which have been implicated in cancer-induced immunosuppression. Taken altogether, this work provides a multi-organ perspective into neutrophil development across healthy and cancer states and identifies markers specific to breast tumor-associated neutrophils which may be potential immunotherapeutic targets.
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