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Diverse clonal fates emerge upon drug treatment of homogeneous cancer cells

Authors :
Goyal, Yogesh
Busch, Gianna T.
Pillai, Maalavika
Li, Jingxin
Boe, Ryan H.
Grody, Emanuelle I.
Chelvanambi, Manoj
Dardani, Ian P.
Emert, Benjamin
Bodkin, Nicholas
Braun, Jonas
Fingerman, Dylan
Kaur, Amanpreet
Jain, Naveen
Ravindran, Pavithran T.
Mellis, Ian A.
Kiani, Karun
Alicea, Gretchen M.
Fane, Mitchell E.
Ahmed, Syeda Subia
Li, Haiyin
Chen, Yeqing
Chai, Cedric
Kaster, Jessica
Witt, Russell G.
Lazcano, Rossana
Ingram, Davis R.
Johnson, Sarah B.
Wani, Khalida
Dunagin, Margaret C.
Lazar, Alexander J.
Weeraratna, Ashani T.
Wargo, Jennifer A.
Herlyn, Meenhard
Raj, Arjun
Source :
Nature; August 2023, Vol. 620 Issue: 7974 p651-659, 9p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Even among genetically identical cancer cells, resistance to therapy frequently emerges from a small subset of those cells1–7. Molecular differences in rare individual cells in the initial population enable certain cells to become resistant to therapy7–9; however, comparatively little is known about the variability in the resistance outcomes. Here we develop and apply FateMap, a framework that combines DNA barcoding with single-cell RNA sequencing, to reveal the fates of hundreds of thousands of clones exposed to anti-cancer therapies. We show that resistant clones emerging from single-cell-derived cancer cells adopt molecularly, morphologically and functionally distinct resistant types. These resistant types are largely predetermined by molecular differences between cells before drug addition and not by extrinsic factors. Changes in the dose and type of drug can switch the resistant type of an initial cell, resulting in the generation and elimination of certain resistant types. Samples from patients show evidence for the existence of these resistant types in a clinical context. We observed diversity in resistant types across several single-cell-derived cancer cell lines and cell types treated with a variety of drugs. The diversity of resistant types as a result of the variability in intrinsic cell states may be a generic feature of responses to external cues.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
620
Issue :
7974
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs63574964
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06342-8