Divergent clonal selection dominates medulloblastoma at recurrence.

TitleDivergent clonal selection dominates medulloblastoma at recurrence.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsA Morrissy S, Garzia L, Shih DJH, Zuyderduyn S, Huang X, Skowron P, Remke M, Cavalli FMG, Ramaswamy V, Lindsay PE et al.
JournalNature
Volume529
Issue7586
Pagination351-7
Date Published2016 Jan 21
ISSN1476-4687
KeywordsAnimals, Cerebellar Neoplasms, Clone Cells, Craniospinal Irradiation, Disease Models, Animal, DNA Mutational Analysis, Drosophila melanogaster, Female, Genome, Human, Humans, Male, Medulloblastoma, Mice, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided, Selection, Genetic, Signal Transduction, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
Abstract

The development of targeted anti-cancer therapies through the study of cancer genomes is intended to increase survival rates and decrease treatment-related toxicity. We treated a transposon-driven, functional genomic mouse model of medulloblastoma with 'humanized' in vivo therapy (microneurosurgical tumour resection followed by multi-fractionated, image-guided radiotherapy). Genetic events in recurrent murine medulloblastoma exhibit a very poor overlap with those in matched murine diagnostic samples (<5%). Whole-genome sequencing of 33 pairs of human diagnostic and post-therapy medulloblastomas demonstrated substantial genetic divergence of the dominant clone after therapy (<12% diagnostic events were retained at recurrence). In both mice and humans, the dominant clone at recurrence arose through clonal selection of a pre-existing minor clone present at diagnosis. Targeted therapy is unlikely to be effective in the absence of the target, therefore our results offer a simple, proximal, and remediable explanation for the failure of prior clinical trials of targeted therapy.

DOI10.1038/nature16478
Alternate JournalNature
PubMed ID26760213
PubMed Central IDPMC4936195
Grant ListP30 CA077598 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01CA159859 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
/ CAPMC / CIHR / Canada
R01 CA159859 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P30 CA030199 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01 CA113636 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01 NS096236 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
R01CA148699 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01 CA163722 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01 CA148699 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
13457 / CRUK_ / Cancer Research UK / United Kingdom