Minimal barriers to invasion during human colorectal tumor growth

Intra-tumoral heterogeneity (ITH) could represent clonal evolution where subclones with greater fitness confer more malignant phenotypes and invasion constitutes an evolutionary bottleneck. Alternatively, ITH could represent branching evolution with invasion of multiple subclones. The two models res...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-03, Vol.11 (1), p.1280-1280, Article 1280
Hauptverfasser: Ryser, Marc D., Mallo, Diego, Hall, Allison, Hardman, Timothy, King, Lorraine M., Tatishchev, Sergei, Sorribes, Inmaculada C., Maley, Carlo C., Marks, Jeffrey R., Hwang, E. Shelley, Shibata, Darryl
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Intra-tumoral heterogeneity (ITH) could represent clonal evolution where subclones with greater fitness confer more malignant phenotypes and invasion constitutes an evolutionary bottleneck. Alternatively, ITH could represent branching evolution with invasion of multiple subclones. The two models respectively predict a hierarchy of subclones arranged by phenotype, or multiple subclones with shared phenotypes. We delineate these modes of invasion by merging ancestral, topographic, and phenotypic information from 12 human colorectal tumors (11 carcinomas, 1 adenoma) obtained through saturation microdissection of 325 small tumor regions. The majority of subclones (29/46, 60%) share superficial and invasive phenotypes. Of 11 carcinomas, 9 show evidence of multiclonal invasion, and invasive and metastatic subclones arise early along the ancestral trees. Early multiclonal invasion in the majority of these tumors indicates the expansion of co-evolving subclones with similar malignant potential in absence of late bottlenecks and suggests that barriers to invasion are minimal during colorectal cancer growth. Invasion is a critical step in tumor development. Here, in colorectal cancer, the authors show that multiclonal invasion of the muscularis mucosae is pervasive, suggesting that invasive capacity is not a significant bottleneck in the evolution of the disease.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-14908-7