Author:
Andor Noemi,Lau Billy T.,Catalanotti Claudia,Kumar Vijay,Sathe Anuja,Belhocine Kamila,Wheeler Tobias D.,Price Andrew D.,Song Maengseok,Džakula Željko,Sorenson Jon,Stafford David,Bent Zachary,DeMare Laura,Hepler Lance,Jett Susana,Lin Bill Kengli,Maheshwari Shamoni,Makarewicz Anthony J.,Rahimi Mohammad,Sawhney Sanjam S.,Sauzade Martin,Shuga Joe,Sullivan-Bibee Katrina,Weinstein Adam,Yang Wei,Yin Yifeng,Kubit Matthew,Chen Jiamin,Grimes Susan M.,Suarez Carlos Jose,Poultsides George A.,Schnall-Levin Michael,Bharadwaj Rajiv,Ji Hanlee P.
Abstract
ABSTRACTSequencing the genomes of individual cancer cells provides the highest resolution of intratumoral heterogeneity. To enable high throughput single cell DNA-Seq across thousands of individual cells per sample, we developed a droplet-based, automated partitioning technology for whole genome sequencing. We applied this approach on a set of gastric cancer cell lines and a primary gastric tumor. In parallel, we conducted a separate single cell RNA-Seq analysis on these same cancers and used copy number to compare results. This joint study, covering thousands of single cell genomes and transcriptomes, revealed extensive cellular diversity based on distinct copy number changes, numerous subclonal populations and in the case of the primary tumor, subclonal gene expression signatures. We found genomic evidence of positive selection – where the percentage of replicating cells per clone is higher than expected – indicating ongoing tumor evolution. Our study demonstrates that joining single cell genomic DNA and transcriptomic features provides novel insights into cancer heterogeneity and biology.SIGNIFICANCEWe conducted a massively parallel DNA sequencing analysis on a set of gastric cancer cell lines and a primary gastric tumor in combination with a joint single cell RNA-Seq analysis. This joint study, covering thousands of single cell genomes and transcriptomes, revealed extensive cellular diversity based on distinct copy number changes, numerous subclonal populations and in the case of the primary tumor, subclonal gene expression signatures. We found genomic evidence of positive selection where the percentage of replicating cells per clone is higher than expected indicating ongoing tumor evolution. Our study demonstrates that combining single cell genomic DNA and transcriptomic features provides novel insights into cancer heterogeneity and biology.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory