Ongoing genome doubling promotes evolvability and immune dysregulation in ovarian cancer
Author:
McPherson AndrewORCID, Vázquez-García IgnacioORCID, Myers Matthew A.ORCID, Zatzman Matthew, Al-Rawi Duaa, Weiner Adam, Freeman Samuel, Mohibullah Neeman, Satas Gryte, Williams Marc J.ORCID, Ceglia Nicholas, Zhang Allen W., Li Jun, Lim Jamie L.P., Wu Michelle, Choi Seongmin, Havasov Eliyahu, Grewal Diljot, Shi Hongyu, Kim Minsoo, Schwarz RolandORCID, Kaufmann Tom, Dinh Khanh NgocORCID, Uhlitz Florian, Tran Julie, Wu Yushi, Patel Ruchi, Ramakrishnan Satish, Kim DooA, Clarke Justin, Green Hunter, Ali Emily, DiBona Melody, Varice Nancy, Kundra Ritika, Broach Vance, Gardner Ginger J., Roche Kara Long, Sonoda Yukio, Zivanovic Oliver, Kim Sarah H., Grisham Rachel N., Liu Ying L., Viale Agnes, Rusk Nicole, Lakhman Yulia, Ellenson Lora H., Tavaré Simon, Aparicio Samuel, Chi Dennis S., Aghajanian Carol, Abu-Rustum Nadeem R., Friedman Claire F., Zamarin Dmitriy, Weigelt Britta, Bakhoum Samuel F., Shah Sohrab P.
Abstract
ABSTRACTWhole-genome doubling (WGD) is a critical driver of tumor development and is linked to drug resistance and metastasis in solid malignancies. Here, we demonstrate that WGD is an ongoing mutational process in tumor evolution. Using single-cell whole-genome sequencing, we measured and modeled how WGD events are distributed across cellular populations within tumors and associated WGD dynamics with properties of genome diversification and phenotypic consequences of innate immunity. We studied WGD evolution in 65 high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) tissue samples from 40 patients, yielding 29,481 tumor cell genomes. We found near-ubiquitous evidence of WGD as an ongoing mutational process promoting cell-cell diversity, high rates of chromosomal missegregation, and consequent micronucleation. Using a novel mutation-based WGD timing method,doubleTime, we delineated specific modes by which WGD can drive tumor evolution: (i) unitary evolutionary origin followed by significant diversification, (ii) independent WGD events on a pre-existing background of copy number diversity, and (iii) evolutionarily late clonal expansions of WGD populations. Additionally, through integrated single-cell RNA sequencing and high-resolution immunofluorescence microscopy, we found that inflammatory signaling and cGAS-STING pathway activation result from ongoing chromosomal instability and are restricted to tumors that remain predominantly diploid. This contrasted with predominantly WGD tumors, which exhibited significant quiescent and immunosuppressive phenotypic states. Together, these findings establish WGD as an evolutionarily ‘active’ mutational process that promotes evolvability and dysregulated immunity in late stage ovarian cancer.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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