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Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer

Intra-tumor heterogeneity is a hallmark of many cancers and may lead to therapy resistance or interfere with personalized treatment strategies. Here, we combined topographic mapping of somatic breakpoints and transcriptional profiling to probe intra-tumor heterogeneity of treatment-naïve stage IIIC/...

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Autores principales: Hoogstraat, Marlous, de Pagter, Mirjam S., Cirkel, Geert A., van Roosmalen, Markus J., Harkins, Timothy T., Duran, Karen, Kreeftmeijer, Jennifer, Renkens, Ivo, Witteveen, Petronella O., Lee, Clarence C., Nijman, Isaac J., Guy, Tanisha, van ’t Slot, Ruben, Jonges, Trudy N., Lolkema, Martijn P., Koudijs, Marco J., Zweemer, Ronald P., Voest, Emile E., Cuppen, Edwin, Kloosterman, Wigard P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3912411/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24221193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.161026.113
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author Hoogstraat, Marlous
de Pagter, Mirjam S.
Cirkel, Geert A.
van Roosmalen, Markus J.
Harkins, Timothy T.
Duran, Karen
Kreeftmeijer, Jennifer
Renkens, Ivo
Witteveen, Petronella O.
Lee, Clarence C.
Nijman, Isaac J.
Guy, Tanisha
van ’t Slot, Ruben
Jonges, Trudy N.
Lolkema, Martijn P.
Koudijs, Marco J.
Zweemer, Ronald P.
Voest, Emile E.
Cuppen, Edwin
Kloosterman, Wigard P.
author_facet Hoogstraat, Marlous
de Pagter, Mirjam S.
Cirkel, Geert A.
van Roosmalen, Markus J.
Harkins, Timothy T.
Duran, Karen
Kreeftmeijer, Jennifer
Renkens, Ivo
Witteveen, Petronella O.
Lee, Clarence C.
Nijman, Isaac J.
Guy, Tanisha
van ’t Slot, Ruben
Jonges, Trudy N.
Lolkema, Martijn P.
Koudijs, Marco J.
Zweemer, Ronald P.
Voest, Emile E.
Cuppen, Edwin
Kloosterman, Wigard P.
author_sort Hoogstraat, Marlous
collection PubMed
description Intra-tumor heterogeneity is a hallmark of many cancers and may lead to therapy resistance or interfere with personalized treatment strategies. Here, we combined topographic mapping of somatic breakpoints and transcriptional profiling to probe intra-tumor heterogeneity of treatment-naïve stage IIIC/IV epithelial ovarian cancer. We observed that most substantial differences in genomic rearrangement landscapes occurred between metastases in the omentum and peritoneum versus tumor sites in the ovaries. Several cancer genes such as NF1, CDKN2A, and FANCD2 were affected by lesion-specific breakpoints. Furthermore, the intra-tumor variability involved different mutational hallmarks including lesion-specific kataegis (local mutation shower coinciding with genomic breakpoints), rearrangement classes, and coding mutations. In one extreme case, we identified two independent TP53 mutations in ovary tumors and omentum/peritoneum metastases, respectively. Examination of gene expression dynamics revealed up-regulation of key cancer pathways including WNT, integrin, chemokine, and Hedgehog signaling in only subsets of tumor samples from the same patient. Finally, we took advantage of the multilevel tumor analysis to understand the effects of genomic breakpoints on qualitative and quantitative gene expression changes. We show that intra-tumor gene expression differences are caused by site-specific genomic alterations, including formation of in-frame fusion genes. These data highlight the plasticity of ovarian cancer genomes, which may contribute to their strong capacity to adapt to changing environmental conditions and give rise to the high rate of recurrent disease following standard treatment regimes.
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spelling pubmed-39124112014-08-01 Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer Hoogstraat, Marlous de Pagter, Mirjam S. Cirkel, Geert A. van Roosmalen, Markus J. Harkins, Timothy T. Duran, Karen Kreeftmeijer, Jennifer Renkens, Ivo Witteveen, Petronella O. Lee, Clarence C. Nijman, Isaac J. Guy, Tanisha van ’t Slot, Ruben Jonges, Trudy N. Lolkema, Martijn P. Koudijs, Marco J. Zweemer, Ronald P. Voest, Emile E. Cuppen, Edwin Kloosterman, Wigard P. Genome Res Research Intra-tumor heterogeneity is a hallmark of many cancers and may lead to therapy resistance or interfere with personalized treatment strategies. Here, we combined topographic mapping of somatic breakpoints and transcriptional profiling to probe intra-tumor heterogeneity of treatment-naïve stage IIIC/IV epithelial ovarian cancer. We observed that most substantial differences in genomic rearrangement landscapes occurred between metastases in the omentum and peritoneum versus tumor sites in the ovaries. Several cancer genes such as NF1, CDKN2A, and FANCD2 were affected by lesion-specific breakpoints. Furthermore, the intra-tumor variability involved different mutational hallmarks including lesion-specific kataegis (local mutation shower coinciding with genomic breakpoints), rearrangement classes, and coding mutations. In one extreme case, we identified two independent TP53 mutations in ovary tumors and omentum/peritoneum metastases, respectively. Examination of gene expression dynamics revealed up-regulation of key cancer pathways including WNT, integrin, chemokine, and Hedgehog signaling in only subsets of tumor samples from the same patient. Finally, we took advantage of the multilevel tumor analysis to understand the effects of genomic breakpoints on qualitative and quantitative gene expression changes. We show that intra-tumor gene expression differences are caused by site-specific genomic alterations, including formation of in-frame fusion genes. These data highlight the plasticity of ovarian cancer genomes, which may contribute to their strong capacity to adapt to changing environmental conditions and give rise to the high rate of recurrent disease following standard treatment regimes. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2014-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3912411/ /pubmed/24221193 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.161026.113 Text en © 2014 Hoogstraat et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Hoogstraat, Marlous
de Pagter, Mirjam S.
Cirkel, Geert A.
van Roosmalen, Markus J.
Harkins, Timothy T.
Duran, Karen
Kreeftmeijer, Jennifer
Renkens, Ivo
Witteveen, Petronella O.
Lee, Clarence C.
Nijman, Isaac J.
Guy, Tanisha
van ’t Slot, Ruben
Jonges, Trudy N.
Lolkema, Martijn P.
Koudijs, Marco J.
Zweemer, Ronald P.
Voest, Emile E.
Cuppen, Edwin
Kloosterman, Wigard P.
Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
title Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
title_full Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
title_fullStr Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
title_full_unstemmed Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
title_short Genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
title_sort genomic and transcriptomic plasticity in treatment-naïve ovarian cancer
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3912411/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24221193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.161026.113
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