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Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response

Tumor cells that preferentially enter circulation include the precursors of metastatic cancer. Previously, we characterized circulating tumor cells (CTC) from patients with breast cancer and identified a signature of genomic regions with recurrent copy-number gains. Through FISH, we now show that th...

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Autores principales: Kanwar, Nisha, Balde, Zaldy, Nair, Ranju, Dawe, Melanie, Chen, Shiyi, Maganti, Manjula, Atenafu, Eshetu G., Manolescu, Sabrina, Wei, Carrie, Mao, Amanda, Fu, Fred, Wang, Dan, Cheung, Alison, Yerofeyeva, Yulia, Peters, Rachel, Liu, Kela, Desmedt, Christine, Sotiriou, Christos, Szekely, Borbala, Kulka, Janina, McKee, Trevor D., Hirano, Naoto, Bartlett, John M.S., Yaffe, Martin J., Bedard, Philippe L., McCready, David, Done, Susan J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association for Cancer Research 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9397625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34711609
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-1079
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author Kanwar, Nisha
Balde, Zaldy
Nair, Ranju
Dawe, Melanie
Chen, Shiyi
Maganti, Manjula
Atenafu, Eshetu G.
Manolescu, Sabrina
Wei, Carrie
Mao, Amanda
Fu, Fred
Wang, Dan
Cheung, Alison
Yerofeyeva, Yulia
Peters, Rachel
Liu, Kela
Desmedt, Christine
Sotiriou, Christos
Szekely, Borbala
Kulka, Janina
McKee, Trevor D.
Hirano, Naoto
Bartlett, John M.S.
Yaffe, Martin J.
Bedard, Philippe L.
McCready, David
Done, Susan J.
author_facet Kanwar, Nisha
Balde, Zaldy
Nair, Ranju
Dawe, Melanie
Chen, Shiyi
Maganti, Manjula
Atenafu, Eshetu G.
Manolescu, Sabrina
Wei, Carrie
Mao, Amanda
Fu, Fred
Wang, Dan
Cheung, Alison
Yerofeyeva, Yulia
Peters, Rachel
Liu, Kela
Desmedt, Christine
Sotiriou, Christos
Szekely, Borbala
Kulka, Janina
McKee, Trevor D.
Hirano, Naoto
Bartlett, John M.S.
Yaffe, Martin J.
Bedard, Philippe L.
McCready, David
Done, Susan J.
author_sort Kanwar, Nisha
collection PubMed
description Tumor cells that preferentially enter circulation include the precursors of metastatic cancer. Previously, we characterized circulating tumor cells (CTC) from patients with breast cancer and identified a signature of genomic regions with recurrent copy-number gains. Through FISH, we now show that these CTC-associated regions are detected within the matched untreated primary tumors of these patients (21% to 69%, median 55.5%, n = 19). Furthermore, they are more prevalent in the metastases of patients who died from breast cancer after multiple rounds of treatment (70% to 100%, median 93%, samples n = 41). Diversity indices revealed that higher spatial heterogeneity for these regions within primary tumors is associated with increased dissemination and metastasis. An identified subclone with multiple regions gained (MRG clone) was enriched in a posttreatment primary breast carcinoma as well as multiple metastatic tumors and local breast recurrences obtained at autopsy, indicative of a distinct early subclone with the capability to resist multiple lines of treatment and eventually cause death. In addition, multiplex immunofluorescence revealed that tumor heterogeneity is significantly associated with the degree of infiltration of B lymphocytes in triple-negative breast cancer, a subtype with a large immune component. Collectively, these data reveal the functional potential of genetic subclones that comprise heterogeneous primary breast carcinomas and are selected for in CTCs and posttreatment breast cancer metastases. In addition, they uncover a relationship between tumor heterogeneity and host immune response in the tumor microenvironment. SIGNIFICANCE: As breast cancers progress, they become more heterogeneous for multiple regions amplified in circulating tumor cells, and intratumoral spatial heterogeneity is associated with the immune landscape.
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spelling pubmed-93976252023-01-05 Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response Kanwar, Nisha Balde, Zaldy Nair, Ranju Dawe, Melanie Chen, Shiyi Maganti, Manjula Atenafu, Eshetu G. Manolescu, Sabrina Wei, Carrie Mao, Amanda Fu, Fred Wang, Dan Cheung, Alison Yerofeyeva, Yulia Peters, Rachel Liu, Kela Desmedt, Christine Sotiriou, Christos Szekely, Borbala Kulka, Janina McKee, Trevor D. Hirano, Naoto Bartlett, John M.S. Yaffe, Martin J. Bedard, Philippe L. McCready, David Done, Susan J. Cancer Res Tumor Biology and Immunology Tumor cells that preferentially enter circulation include the precursors of metastatic cancer. Previously, we characterized circulating tumor cells (CTC) from patients with breast cancer and identified a signature of genomic regions with recurrent copy-number gains. Through FISH, we now show that these CTC-associated regions are detected within the matched untreated primary tumors of these patients (21% to 69%, median 55.5%, n = 19). Furthermore, they are more prevalent in the metastases of patients who died from breast cancer after multiple rounds of treatment (70% to 100%, median 93%, samples n = 41). Diversity indices revealed that higher spatial heterogeneity for these regions within primary tumors is associated with increased dissemination and metastasis. An identified subclone with multiple regions gained (MRG clone) was enriched in a posttreatment primary breast carcinoma as well as multiple metastatic tumors and local breast recurrences obtained at autopsy, indicative of a distinct early subclone with the capability to resist multiple lines of treatment and eventually cause death. In addition, multiplex immunofluorescence revealed that tumor heterogeneity is significantly associated with the degree of infiltration of B lymphocytes in triple-negative breast cancer, a subtype with a large immune component. Collectively, these data reveal the functional potential of genetic subclones that comprise heterogeneous primary breast carcinomas and are selected for in CTCs and posttreatment breast cancer metastases. In addition, they uncover a relationship between tumor heterogeneity and host immune response in the tumor microenvironment. SIGNIFICANCE: As breast cancers progress, they become more heterogeneous for multiple regions amplified in circulating tumor cells, and intratumoral spatial heterogeneity is associated with the immune landscape. American Association for Cancer Research 2021-12-15 2021-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9397625/ /pubmed/34711609 http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-1079 Text en ©2021 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open access article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.
spellingShingle Tumor Biology and Immunology
Kanwar, Nisha
Balde, Zaldy
Nair, Ranju
Dawe, Melanie
Chen, Shiyi
Maganti, Manjula
Atenafu, Eshetu G.
Manolescu, Sabrina
Wei, Carrie
Mao, Amanda
Fu, Fred
Wang, Dan
Cheung, Alison
Yerofeyeva, Yulia
Peters, Rachel
Liu, Kela
Desmedt, Christine
Sotiriou, Christos
Szekely, Borbala
Kulka, Janina
McKee, Trevor D.
Hirano, Naoto
Bartlett, John M.S.
Yaffe, Martin J.
Bedard, Philippe L.
McCready, David
Done, Susan J.
Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response
title Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response
title_full Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response
title_fullStr Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response
title_full_unstemmed Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response
title_short Heterogeneity of Circulating Tumor Cell–Associated Genomic Gains in Breast Cancer and Its Association with the Host Immune Response
title_sort heterogeneity of circulating tumor cell–associated genomic gains in breast cancer and its association with the host immune response
topic Tumor Biology and Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9397625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34711609
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-1079
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