(3.3.10)--脑科学与影像新技术.pdf
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1、Intratumor heterogeneity in human glioblastomareflects cancer evolutionary dynamicsAndrea Sottorivaa,b,c,1,Inmaculada Spiterib,1,Sara G.M.Piccirillod,Anestis Touloumisb,e,V.Peter Collinsf,John C.Marionie,Christina Curtisc,Colin Wattsd,g,2,and Simon Tavara,b,h,2aDepartment of Oncology,University of C
2、ambridge,Cambridge CB2 2XZ,United Kingdom;bCancer Research UK,Cambridge Research Institute,Li Ka ShingCentre,Cambridge CB2 0RE,United Kingdom;cDepartment of Preventive Medicine,Keck School of Medicine,University of Southern California,Los Angeles,CA 90033;dDepartment of Clinical Neurosciences,Cambri
3、dge Centre for Brain Repair,University of Cambridge,Cambridge CB2 0PY,UnitedKingdom;eEuropean Molecular Biology Laboratory-European Bioinformatics Institute,Wellcome Trust Genome Campus,Cambridge CB10 1SD,UnitedKingdom;fDivision of Molecular Histopathology,Department of Pathology,University of Cambr
4、idge,Addenbrookes Hospital,Cambridge CB2 0QQ,United Kingdom;gDivision of Neurosurgery,Department of Clinical Neurosciences,University of Cambridge,Addenbrookes Hospital,Cambridge CB2 0QQ,United Kingdom;andhDepartment of Biological Sciences,University of Southern California,Los Angeles,CA 90089Edited
5、 by Dennis A.Carson,University of California at San Diego,La Jolla,CA,and approved January 17,2013(received for review November 14,2012)Glioblastoma(GB)is the most common and aggressiveprimary brainmalignancy,with poor prognosis and a lack of effective therapeuticoptions.Accumulating evidence sugges
6、ts that intratumor heteroge-neity likely is the key to understanding treatment failure.However,theextentofintratumorheterogeneityasaresultoftumorevolutionis still poorly understood.To address this,we developed a uniquesurgical multisampling scheme to collect spatially distinct tumorfragments from 11
7、 GB patients.We present an integrated genomicanalysis that uncovers extensive intratumor heterogeneity,withmost patients displaying different GB subtypes within the sametumor.Moreover,we reconstructed the phylogeny of the fragmentsfor each patient,identifying copy number alterations in EGFR andCDKN2
8、A/B/p14ARF as early events,and aberrations in PDGFRA andPTEN as later events during cancer progression.We also character-ized the clonal organization of each tumor fragment at the single-moleculelevel,detectingmultiplecoexistingcelllineages.Ourresultsreveal the genome-wide architecture of intratumor
9、 variability in GBacross multiple spatial scales and patient-specific patterns of cancerevolution,with consequences for treatment design.tumor progression|high grade gliomaGlioblastoma(GB)is the most common primary brain malig-nancy in adults and one of the most aggressive cancers.Themedian survival
10、 in the general patient population is just 4.6 mo.Even in optimally treated patients,the median survival is 14 mo,with a 26%2-y survival rate(1).Considering the average age atdiagnosis,GB typically results in more than 20 y of life lost(2).Since the 1970s,primary treatment has involved surgery follo
11、wedby radiotherapy(3).Recently,targeted chemotherapy approachessuchasthealkylatingagenttemozolomide(1)alsohavebeenused,although with modest effects on survival.The impossibility of ex-tensive tumor debulking and poor drug delivery in the brain con-tribute significantly to the lack of effective treat
12、ment options andpoor prognosis.Insights into the genetic regulatory landscape of GB havebeen achieved through The Cancer Genome Atlas(4)and otherstudies(5).Furthermore,patterns of gene expression have beencollated to identify molecular subgroups with putative prog-nostic or predictive significance(5
13、,6).Nevertheless,the poorprognosis is compounded by the endemic problem of diseaseheterogeneity,which has been reported extensively for othercancer types(710).In glioblastoma,FISH has been used toidentify receptor tyrosine kinase amplifications as markers forthe generation of heterogeneity through c
14、lonal evolution(11,12).These data are based on archival material from single tumorsamples.Spatial heterogeneity within an individual tumor masshas not been investigated yet,and the impact of sampling biashas not been addressed.Furthermore,genome-wide studies ofintratumor heterogeneity in GB have yet
15、 to be performed.Real-time perioperative tumor sampling of GB may be con-founded by tumor necrosis and the challenge of distinguishing dis-ease from normal brain tissue.To address this,we have developeda fluorescence-guided multiple sampling(FGMS)approach(13)based on 5-aminolevulinic acid administra
16、tion(14)to improve ob-jective GB sampling in the operating theater.During surgery(Fig.1A),viable tumor tissue can be identified by visible fluorescence(Fig.1B).We adapted this technique to perform multiple samplingof objectively defined(visibly fluorescent)and spatially distinct GBtumor fragments fr
17、om 11 patients(see Table S1 for sample details).During the operation,between four and six fragments(T1,T2,.)with a volume of 23 mm3each were obtained from the neoplasm,with samples separated by at least 1 cm(Fig.1C).The fragmentswere labeled in order of resection,with superficial fragments takenduri
18、ng the early stages of tumor debulking(T1,T2),followed bydeeper fragments(T3,T4,.)taken later in the operation.In ad-dition,we collected a further fragment from the bulk of the tumormass(T)and a blood sample as a source of germline DNA to dis-tinguish somatic copy number lesions.Histopathological an
19、alysisshowed that all fragments had similar proliferative index,cellularatypia,and vascularization and were devoid of significant necroticareas(as evident by fluorescence-aided resection).This samplingtechnique,performeddirectlyintheoperatingtheater,allowedustocollect a unique dataset to interrogate
20、 intratumor heterogeneity atthe genomic level across the malignancy.Here,we show that genome-wide GB intratumor genomicheterogeneity can be decomposed to reveal tumor evolution.Moreover,we report that based upon gene expression levels,tumor fragments from the same patient may be classified intodiffe
21、rent GB subtypes.Using single-molecule approaches,wealso investigate the clonal composition of single fragments,re-vealing that a hierarchy of mitotic clones coexists within thesame fragment.Our results show that tumor heterogeneityAuthor contributions:A.S.,C.W.,and S.T.designed research;A.S.,I.S.,a
22、nd A.T.analyzedand interpreted the data;I.S.and S.G.M.P.performed sample collection,processing,anddata generation;C.C.contributed new reagents/analytic tools;V.P.C.performed histo-pathological analysis;C.W.collected the samples in the operating theater;and A.S.,I.S.,S.G.M.P.,A.T.,V.P.C.,J.C.M.,C.C.,
23、C.W.,and S.T.wrote the paper.The authors declare no conflict of interest.This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.Data deposition:Copy number arrays and gene number arrays reported in this paper havebeen deposited in the ArrayExpress Archiv
24、e,www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/(accession nos.E-MTAB-1215 and E-MTAB-1129).1A.S.and I.S.contributed equally to this work.2To whom correspondence may be addressed.E-mail:cw209cam.ac.uk or st321cam.ac.uk.This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.12
25、19747110/-/DCSupplemental.www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1219747110PNAS|March 5,2013|vol.110|no.10|40094014MEDICAL SCIENCESrepresents a specific signature that informs on GB evolutionarydynamics at the single-patient level.ResultsSubset of GB Putative Drivers Is Consistently Heterogeneous.Weprofi
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