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Genetic variegation of clonal architecture and propagating cells in leukaemia
Authors:Anderson Kristina  Lutz Christoph  van Delft Frederik W  Bateman Caroline M  Guo Yanping  Colman Susan M  Kempski Helena  Moorman Anthony V  Titley Ian  Swansbury John  Kearney Lyndal  Enver Tariq  Greaves Mel
Institution:Section of Haemato-Oncology, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton SM2 5NG, UK.
Abstract:Little is known of the genetic architecture of cancer at the subclonal and single-cell level or in the cells responsible for cancer clone maintenance and propagation. Here we have examined this issue in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in which the ETV6-RUNX1 gene fusion is an early or initiating genetic lesion followed by a modest number of recurrent or 'driver' copy number alterations. By multiplexing fluorescence in situ hybridization probes for these mutations, up to eight genetic abnormalities can be detected in single cells, a genetic signature of subclones identified and a composite picture of subclonal architecture and putative ancestral trees assembled. Subclones in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia have variegated genetics and complex, nonlinear or branching evolutionary histories. Copy number alterations are independently and reiteratively acquired in subclones of individual patients, and in no preferential order. Clonal architecture is dynamic and is subject to change in the lead-up to a diagnosis and in relapse. Leukaemia propagating cells, assayed by serial transplantation in NOD/SCID IL2Rγ(null) mice, are also genetically variegated, mirroring subclonal patterns, and vary in competitive regenerative capacity in vivo. These data have implications for cancer genomics and for the targeted therapy of cancer.
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