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Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer

Longitudinal tumor sequencing of recurrent bladder cancer (BC) can facilitate the investigation of BC progression-associated genomic and transcriptomic alterations. In this study, we analyzed 18 tumor specimens including distant and locoregional metastases obtained during tumor progression for five...

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Autores principales: Ryu, Daeun, Kim, Tae-Min, Lee, Yun-Hee, Ha, U-Syn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10179737/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37176124
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098418
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author Ryu, Daeun
Kim, Tae-Min
Lee, Yun-Hee
Ha, U-Syn
author_facet Ryu, Daeun
Kim, Tae-Min
Lee, Yun-Hee
Ha, U-Syn
author_sort Ryu, Daeun
collection PubMed
description Longitudinal tumor sequencing of recurrent bladder cancer (BC) can facilitate the investigation of BC progression-associated genomic and transcriptomic alterations. In this study, we analyzed 18 tumor specimens including distant and locoregional metastases obtained during tumor progression for five BC patients using whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing. Along with the substantial level of intratumoral mutational heterogeneity across the cases, we observed that clonal mutations were enriched with known BC driver genes and apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide (APOBEC)-associated mutation signatures compared with subclonal mutations, suggesting the genetic makeup for BC tumorigenesis associated with APOBEC deaminase activity was accomplished early in the cancer evolution. Mutation-based phylogenetic analyses also revealed temporal dynamics of mutational clonal architectures in which the number of mutational clones varied along the BC progression and notably was often punctuated by clonal sweeps associated with chemotherapy. The bulk-level transcriptome sequencing revealed frequent subtype switching in which transcriptionally defined BC subtypes may vary during tumor progression. Longitudinal whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of recurrent BC may advance our understanding into the BC heterogeneity in terms of somatic mutations, cell clones and transcriptome-based tumor subtypes during disease progression.
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spelling pubmed-101797372023-05-13 Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer Ryu, Daeun Kim, Tae-Min Lee, Yun-Hee Ha, U-Syn Int J Mol Sci Article Longitudinal tumor sequencing of recurrent bladder cancer (BC) can facilitate the investigation of BC progression-associated genomic and transcriptomic alterations. In this study, we analyzed 18 tumor specimens including distant and locoregional metastases obtained during tumor progression for five BC patients using whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing. Along with the substantial level of intratumoral mutational heterogeneity across the cases, we observed that clonal mutations were enriched with known BC driver genes and apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide (APOBEC)-associated mutation signatures compared with subclonal mutations, suggesting the genetic makeup for BC tumorigenesis associated with APOBEC deaminase activity was accomplished early in the cancer evolution. Mutation-based phylogenetic analyses also revealed temporal dynamics of mutational clonal architectures in which the number of mutational clones varied along the BC progression and notably was often punctuated by clonal sweeps associated with chemotherapy. The bulk-level transcriptome sequencing revealed frequent subtype switching in which transcriptionally defined BC subtypes may vary during tumor progression. Longitudinal whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of recurrent BC may advance our understanding into the BC heterogeneity in terms of somatic mutations, cell clones and transcriptome-based tumor subtypes during disease progression. MDPI 2023-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10179737/ /pubmed/37176124 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098418 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ryu, Daeun
Kim, Tae-Min
Lee, Yun-Hee
Ha, U-Syn
Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer
title Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer
title_full Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer
title_fullStr Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer
title_short Longitudinal Analyses of Mutational Subclonal Architecture and Tumor Subtypes in Recurrent Bladder Cancer
title_sort longitudinal analyses of mutational subclonal architecture and tumor subtypes in recurrent bladder cancer
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10179737/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37176124
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24098418
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