Cancer cell lines show high heritability for motility but not generation time

Author:

Wass Anastasia V.1,Butler George1ORCID,Taylor Tiffany B.12ORCID,Dash Philip R.1ORCID,Johnson Louise J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading, Berkshire RG6 6AH, UK

2. The Milner Centre for Evolution and Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath, Somerset BA2 7AY, UK

Abstract

Tumour evolution depends on heritable differences between cells in traits affecting cell survival or replication. It is well established that cancer cells are genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous; however, the extent to which this phenotypic variation is heritable is far less well explored. Here, we estimate the broad-sense heritability ( H 2 ) of two cell traits related to cancer hallmarks––cell motility and generation time––within populations of four cancer cell lines in vitro and find that motility is strongly heritable. This heritability is stable across multiple cell generations, with heritability values at the high end of those measured for a range of traits in natural populations of animals or plants. These findings confirm a central assumption of cancer evolution, provide a first quantification of the evolvability of key traits in cancer cells and indicate that there is ample raw material for experimental evolution in cancer cell lines. Generation time, a trait directly affecting cell fitness, shows substantially lower values of heritability than cell speed, consistent with its having been under directional selection removing heritable variation.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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1. Impact of 3D printed medical equipment on the management of the Covid19 pandemic;The International Journal of Health Planning and Management;2020-06-22

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