Gallbladder adenocarcinomas undergo subclonal diversification and selection from precancerous lesions to metastatic tumors

Author:

Kang Minsu1ORCID,Na Hee Young2,Ahn Soomin3ORCID,Kim Ji-Won14ORCID,Lee Sejoon5,Ahn Soyeon6,Lee Ju Hyun1,Youk Jeonghwan1,Kim Haesook T7,Kim Kui-Jin8,Suh Koung Jin1,Lee Jun Suh9,Kim Se Hyun1ORCID,Kim Jin Won1,Kim Yu Jung1,Lee Keun-Wook1,Yoon Yoo-Seok9,Kim Jee Hyun1,Chung Jin-Haeng2,Han Ho-Seong9,Lee Jong Seok1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

2. Department of Pathology, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

3. Department of Pathology and Translational Genomics, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine

4. Genealogy Inc

5. Center for Precision Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

6. Medical Research Collaboration Center, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

7. Department of Data Science, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

8. Biomedical Research Institute, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

9. Department of Surgery, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

Abstract

We aimed to elucidate the evolutionary trajectories of gallbladder adenocarcinoma (GBAC) using multi-regional and longitudinal tumor samples. Using whole-exome sequencing data, we constructed phylogenetic trees in each patient and analyzed mutational signatures. A total of 11 patients including 2 rapid autopsy cases were enrolled. The most frequently altered gene in primary tumors was ERBB2 and TP53 (54.5%), followed by FBXW7 (27.3%). Most mutations in frequently altered genes in primary tumors were detectable in concurrent precancerous lesions (biliary intraepithelial neoplasia [BilIN]), but a substantial proportion was subclonal. Subclonal diversity was common in BilIN (n=4). However, among subclones in BilIN, a certain subclone commonly shrank in concurrent primary tumors. In addition, selected subclones underwent linear and branching evolution, maintaining subclonal diversity. Combined analysis with metastatic tumors (n=11) identified branching evolution in nine patients (81.8%). Of these, eight patients (88.9%) had a total of 11 subclones expanded at least sevenfold during metastasis. These subclones harbored putative metastasis-driving mutations in cancer-related genes such as SMAD4, ROBO1, and DICER1. In mutational signature analysis, six mutational signatures were identified: 1, 3, 7, 13, 22, and 24 (cosine similarity >0.9). Signatures 1 (age) and 13 (APOBEC) decreased during metastasis while signatures 22 (aristolochic acid) and 24 (aflatoxin) were relatively highlighted. Subclonal diversity arose early in precancerous lesions and clonal selection was a common event during malignant transformation in GBAC. However, selected cancer clones continued to evolve and thus maintained subclonal diversity in metastatic tumors.

Funder

Seoul National University Bundang Hospital Research Fund

Small Grant for Exploratory Reserach

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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