Determinants of renal cell carcinoma invasion and metastatic competence

Author:

Kim Kangsan,Zhou Qinbo,Christie Alana,Stevens Christina,Ma Yuanqing,Onabolu Oreoluwa,Chintalapati Suneetha,Mckenzie Tiffani,Tcheuyap Vanina Toffessi,Woolford Layton,Zhang He,Singla Nirmish,Parida Pravat Kumar,Marquez-Palencia Mauricio,Pedrosa Ivan,Margulis Vitaly,Sagalowsky Arthur,Xie ZhiqunORCID,Wang TaoORCID,Durinck Steffen,Modrusan Zora,Seshagiri Somasekar,Kapur PayalORCID,Brugarolas JamesORCID,Malladi SrinivasORCID

Abstract

AbstractMetastasis is the principal cause of cancer related deaths. Tumor invasion is essential for metastatic spread. However, determinants of invasion are poorly understood. We addressed this knowledge gap by leveraging a unique attribute of kidney cancer. Renal tumors invade into large vessels forming tumor thrombi (TT) that migrate extending sometimes into the heart. Over a decade, we prospectively enrolled 83 ethnically-diverse patients undergoing surgical resection for grossly invasive tumors at UT Southwestern Kidney Cancer Program. In this study, we perform comprehensive histological analyses, integrate multi-region genomic studies, generate in vivo models, and execute functional studies to define tumor invasion and metastatic competence. We find that invasion is not always associated with the most aggressive clone. Driven by immediate early genes, invasion appears to be an opportunistic trait attained by subclones with diverse oncogenomic status in geospatial proximity to vasculature. We show that not all invasive tumors metastasize and identify determinants of metastatic competency. TT associated with metastases are characterized by higher grade, mTOR activation and a particular immune contexture. Moreover, TT grade is a better predictor of metastasis than overall tumor grade, which may have implications for clinical practice.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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