Artificial selection for host resistance to tumour growth and subsequent cancer cell adaptations: an evolutionary arms race

Author:

Ibrahim-Hashim Arig,Luddy Kimberly,Abrahams Dominique,Enriquez-Navas Pedro,Damgaci Sultan,Yao Jiqiang,Chen Tingan,Bui Marilyn M.,Gillies Robert J.ORCID,O’Farrelly Cliona,Richards Christina L.,Brown Joel S.,Gatenby Robert A.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Cancer progression is governed by evolutionary dynamics in both the tumour population and its host. Since cancers die with the host, each new population of cancer cells must reinvent strategies to overcome the host’s heritable defences. In contrast, host species evolve defence strategies over generations if tumour development limits procreation. Methods We investigate this “evolutionary arms race” through intentional breeding of immunodeficient SCID and immunocompetent Black/6 mice to evolve increased tumour suppression. Over 10 generations, we injected Lewis lung mouse carcinoma cells [LL/2-Luc-M38] and selectively bred the two individuals with the slowest tumour growth at day 11. Their male progeny were hosts in the subsequent round. Results The evolved SCID mice suppressed tumour growth through biomechanical restriction from increased mesenchymal proliferation, and the evolved Black/6 mice suppressed tumour growth by increasing immune-mediated killing of cancer cells. However, transcriptomic changes of multicellular tissue organisation and function genes allowed LL/2-Luc-M38 cells to adapt through increased matrix remodelling in SCID mice, and reduced angiogenesis, increased energy utilisation and accelerated proliferation in Black/6 mice. Conclusion Host species can rapidly evolve both immunologic and non-immunologic tumour defences. However, cancer cell plasticity allows effective phenotypic and population-based counter strategies.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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