Intra-tumour diversification in colorectal cancer at the single-cell level
Roerink, Sophie F.; Sasaki, Nobuo; Lee-Six, Henry; Young, Matthew D.; Alexandrov, Ludmil B.; Behjati, Sam; Mitchell, Thomas J.; Grossmann, Sebastian; Lightfoot, Howard; Egan, David A.; Pronk, Apollo; Smakman, Niels; Van Gorp, Joost; Anderson, Elizabeth; Gamble, Stephen J.; Alder, Chris; Van De Wetering, Marc; Campbell, Peter J.; Stratton, Michael R.; Clevers, Hans
(2018) Nature, volume 556, issue 7702, pp. 437 - 462
(Article)
Abstract
Every cancer originates from a single cell. During expansion of the neoplastic cell population, individual cells acquire genetic and phenotypic differences from each other. Here, to investigate the nature and extent of intra-tumour diversification, we characterized organoids derived from multiple single cells from three colorectal cancers as well as from
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adjacent normal intestinal crypts. Colorectal cancer cells showed extensive mutational diversification and carried several times more somatic mutations than normal colorectal cells. Most mutations were acquired during the final dominant clonal expansion of the cancer and resulted from mutational processes that are absent from normal colorectal cells. Intra-tumour diversification of DNA methylation and transcriptome states also occurred; these alterations were cell-autonomous, stable, and followed the phylogenetic tree of each cancer. There were marked differences in responses to anticancer drugs between even closely related cells of the same tumour. The results indicate that colorectal cancer cells experience substantial increases in somatic mutation rate compared to normal colorectal cells, and that genetic diversification of each cancer is accompanied by pervasive, stable and inherited differences in the biological states of individual cancer cells.
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Keywords: General
ISSN: 0028-0836
Publisher: Nature Research
Note: Funding Information: Acknowledgements We thank I. Martincorena, R. van Boxtel, J. Truszkowski, H. Francies and M. Garnett for discussion of our findings. This work was supported by funding from the Wellcome Trust (098051), Stichting Vrienden van het Hubrecht and KWF (SU2C-AACR-DT1213 and HUBR KWF 2014-6917). Individual authors were supported as follows: S.F.R., Louis-Jeantet Foundation; N.S., JSPS Overseas Research Fellowships; H.L.-S., Wellcome Trust Nonclinical PhD Studentship; S.B., Wellcome Trust Intermediate Clinical Research Fellowship and St. Baldrick’s Foundation Robert J. Arceci Innovation Award; P.J.C., Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellowship in Clinical Science. Publisher Copyright: © 2018 Macmillan Publishers Ltd., part of Springer Nature.
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