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Four evolutionary trajectories underlie genetic intratumoral variation in childhood cancer

Authors :
Louise Cornmark
Noémie Braekeveldt
Jenny Karlsson
Torbjörn Backman
Anna Börjesson
Ingrid Øra
Johan Staaf
Sofia Bredin
Linda Holmquist Mengelbier
Barbara Gürtl Lackner
Bengt Sandstedt
Niklas Pal
Daniel Bexell
Anders Isaksson
Anders Valind
Björn Viklund
Tord Jonson
Caroline Jansson
Amina Wali
David Gisselsson
Source :
Nature genetics. 50(7)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

A major challenge to personalized oncology is that driver mutations vary among cancer cells inhabiting the same tumor. Whether this reflects principally disparate patterns of Darwinian evolution in different tumor regions has remained unexplored1–5. We mapped the prevalence of genetically distinct clones over 250 regions in 54 childhood cancers. This showed that primary tumors can simultaneously follow up to four evolutionary trajectories over different anatomic areas. The most common pattern consists of subclones with very few mutations confined to a single tumor region. The second most common is a stable coexistence, over vast areas, of clones characterized by changes in chromosome numbers. This is contrasted by a third, less frequent, pattern where a clone with driver mutations or structural chromosome rearrangements emerges through a clonal sweep to dominate an anatomical region. The fourth and rarest pattern is the local emergence of a myriad of clones with TP53 inactivation. Death from disease was limited to tumors exhibiting the two last, most dynamic patterns.

Details

ISSN :
15461718
Volume :
50
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dc30e47f16600c2c4e3beadf92ee7253