Epigenome and early selection determine the tumour-immune evolutionary trajectory of colorectal cancer

Author:

Lakatos EszterORCID,Gunasri VinayaORCID,Zapata LuisORCID,Househam JacobORCID,Heide TimonORCID,Trahearn NicholasORCID,Swinyard OttilieORCID,Cisneros LuisORCID,Lynn ClaireORCID,Mossner MaximilianORCID,Kimberley ChrisORCID,Spiteri InmaculadaORCID,Cresswell George D.ORCID,Llibre-Palomar GerardORCID,Mitchison MiriamORCID,Maley Carlo C.ORCID,Jansen MarnixORCID,Rodriguez-Justo ManuelORCID,Bridgewater JohnORCID,Baker Ann-MarieORCID,Sottoriva AndreaORCID,Graham Trevor A.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTImmune system control is a major hurdle that cancer evolution must circumvent. The relative timing and evolutionary dynamics of subclones that have escaped immune control remain incompletely characterized, and how immune-mediated selection shapes the epigenome has received little attention. Here, we infer the genome- and epigenome-driven evolutionary dynamics of tumour-immune coevolution within primary colorectal cancers (CRCs). We utilise our existing CRC multi-region multi-omic dataset that we supplement with high-resolution spatially-resolved neoantigen sequencing data and highly multiplexed imaging of the tumour microenvironment (TME). Analysis of somatic chromatin accessibility alterations (SCAAs) reveals frequent somatic loss of accessibility at antigen presenting genes, and that SCAAs contribute to silencing of neoantigens. We observe that strong immune escape and exclusion occur at the outset of CRC formation, and that within tumours, including at the microscopic level of individual tumour glands, additional immune escape alterations have negligible consequences for the immunophenotype of cancer cells. Further minor immuno-editing occurs during local invasion and is associated with TME reorganisation, but that evolutionary bottleneck is relatively weak. Collectively, we show that immune evasion in CRC follows a “Big Bang” evolutionary pattern, whereby genetic, epigenetic and TME-driven immune evasion acquired by the time of transformation defines subsequent cancer-immune evolution.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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