39 research outputs found
Deterministic evolution and stringent selection during preneoplasia
The earliest events during human tumour initiation, although poorly characterized, may hold clues to malignancy detection and prevention1. Here we model occult preneoplasia by biallelic inactivation of TP53, a common early event in gastric cancer, in human gastric organoids. Causal relationships between this initiating genetic lesion and resulting phenotypes were established using experimental evolution in multiple clonally derived cultures over 2 years. TP53 loss elicited progressive aneuploidy, including copy number alterations and structural variants prevalent in gastric cancers, with evident preferred orders. Longitudinal single-cell sequencing of TP53-deficient gastric organoids similarly indicates progression towards malignant transcriptional programmes. Moreover, high-throughput lineage tracing with expressed cellular barcodes demonstrates reproducible dynamics whereby initially rare subclones with shared transcriptional programmes repeatedly attain clonal dominance. This powerful platform for experimental evolution exposes stringent selection, clonal interference and a marked degree of phenotypic convergence in premalignant epithelial organoids. These data imply predictability in the earliest stages of tumorigenesis and show evolutionary constraints and barriers to malignant transformation, with implications for earlier detection and interception of aggressive, genome-instable tumours
Regulatory module involving FGF13, miR-504, and p53 regulates ribosomal biogenesis and supports cancer cell survival
The microRNA miR-504 targets TP53 mRNA encoding the p53 tumor suppressor. miR-504 resides within the fibroblast growth factor 13 (FGF13) gene, which is overexpressed in various cancers. We report that the FGF13 locus, comprising FGF13 and miR-504, is transcriptionally repressed by p53, defining an additional negative feedback loop in the p53 network. Furthermore, we show that FGF13 1A is a nucleolar protein that represses ribosomal RNA transcription and attenuates protein synthesis. Importantly, in cancer cells expressing high levels of FGF13, the depletion of FGF13 elicits increased proteostasis stress, associated with the accumulation of reactive oxygen species and apoptosis. Notably, stepwise neoplastic transformation is accompanied by a gradual increase in FGF13 expression and increased dependence on FGF13 for survival ("nononcogene addiction"). Moreover, FGF13 overexpression enables cells to cope more effectively with the stress elicited by oncogenic Ras protein. We propose that, in cells in which activated oncogenes drive excessive protein synthesis, FGF13 may favor survival by maintaining translation rates at a level compatible with the protein quality- control capacity of the cell. Thus, FGF13 may serve as an enabler, allowing cancer cells to evade proteostasis stress triggered by oncogene activation
Functional characterization of the p53 “mutome”
Phenotypic characterization of mutations in the tumor protein p53 (TP53) gene has so far focused on a handful of relatively frequent “hotspot” mutations, accounting for only ~ 30% of cases. We expanded the scope and quantitatively measured the impact of thousands of distinct TP53 mutations in vitro and in vivo, providing insights into the connections between structure, function, evolutionary conservation and clinical impact
Abstract P4-07-01: Tumor expression and microenvironment in HER2-positive breast cancer before and on HER2-targeted therapy: Analysis of microarray expression data from the TRIO-US B07 trial
Abstract Background: Neoadjuvant HER2-targeted therapy in combination with chemotherapy is a standard treatment approach for early-stage HER2-positive breast cancer. Proposed biomarkers to predict pathologic complete response (pCR), and thereby inform which patients may benefit from de-escalation of therapy, include expression-based subtyping and immune enrichment scores. Little is known about how tumors and their microenvironment may change with HER2-targeted therapy alone, and whether these changes may predict outcome. Methods: The TRIO-US B07 phase II trial randomized 128 participants with stage I-III HER2-positive breast cancer to trastuzumab (N=34), lapatinib (N=36), or the combination (N=58) for three weeks, followed by six cycles of docetaxel and carboplatin with continued HER2-targeted therapy. Fresh-frozen core biopsies of the tumor prior to therapy (N=110) and after 14-21 days of HER2-targeted therapy alone (N=89) were collected, and RNA was extracted and subjected to Agilent Whole Human Genome 44K 2-color chip. The pre-treatment tumor RNA was normalized against a mixed breast tumor reference, and the on-treatment tumor RNA against the matched pre-treatment sample. Absolute intrinsic molecular subtyping was used to determine intrinsic subtype, the iC10 expression-based classifier to determine integrative subtype, gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) to assess signature changes across treatment, single-sample GSEA to compare individual gene signature scores between tumors, and CIBERSORT to quantify immune cell populations before and on treatment. Results: Primary trial results have been reported previously and showed a pCR rate of 47% with trastuzumab, 25% with lapatinib, and 52% with the combination. Prior to treatment, 56% of tumors classified as the HER2-enriched intrinsic subtype and 78% as the iC5 integrative subtype. HER2-enriched tumors trended toward a higher rate of pCR relative to other intrinsic subtypes (50% vs 33%, P=0.12), as did iC5 tumors relative to other integrative subtypes (48% vs 25%, P=0.08). However, in multivariate analysis, HER2 FISH ratio (P=0.04) and hormone receptor status (P=0.02), each associated themselves with intrinsic and integrative subtype, proved the most valuable in predicting pCR, with little information added by expression-based subtyping. Immune cell signatures correlated with pCR in the trastuzumab-containing arms only. Of 65 gene signatures tested, 47 changed across HER2-targeted therapy with false discovery rate < 0.1, driven by decreasing tumor proliferation, increasing immune cell signatures, and increasing stromal cell/epithelial mesenchymal transition signatures. Quantification of immune cell populations suggested the immune changes were both anti-tumor (CD8+ T cells) and pro-tumor (M2 macrophages). Intrinsic subtype changed in 54% of tumors (79% of these converting to normal-like) and integrative subtype changed in 26%. Change in subtype, proliferation, or immune infiltration with targeted therapy did not correlate with pCR. A higher proportion of tumors treated with trastuzumab alone maintained their proliferation (42%), compared with lapatinib alone (20%; P=0.16) or the combination (16%; P=0.04). Conclusions: In the TRIO-US B07 study, the biomarkers most predictive of response to neoadjuvant HER2-targeted therapy were hormone receptor status in combination with HER2 FISH ratio. Multiple changes in the tumor and its microenvironment occurred with HER2-targeted therapy, but these changes did not predict pCR. Tumors treated with lapatinib tended to decrease proliferation more than tumors treated with trastuzumab, despite trastuzumab being more effective in preventing recurrence, an observation with implications for window of opportunity studies. Citation Format: Jennifer L. Caswell-Jin, Katherine L. McNamara, Judy Dering, Hsiao-Wang Chen, Robert Dichmann, Alejandra Perez, Ravindranath Patel, Eran Kotler, Jason J. Zoeller, Joan S. Brugge, Michael F. Press, Dennis J. Slamon, Christina Curtis, Sara A. Hurvitz. Tumor expression and microenvironment in HER2-positive breast cancer before and on HER2-targeted therapy: Analysis of microarray expression data from the TRIO-US B07 trial [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2019 Dec 10-14; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(4 Suppl):Abstract nr P4-07-01
Spatial proteomic characterization of HER2-positive breast tumors through neoadjuvant therapy predicts response
The addition of HER2-targeted agents to neoadjuvant chemotherapy has dramatically improved pathological complete response (pCR) rates in early-stage, HER2-positive breast cancer. Nonetheless, up to 50% of patients have residual disease after treatment, while others are likely overtreated. Here, we performed multiplex spatial proteomic characterization of 122 samples from 57 HER2-positive breast tumors from the neoadjuvant TRIO-US B07 clinical trial sampled pre-treatment, after 14-21 d of HER2-targeted therapy and at surgery. We demonstrated that proteomic changes after a single cycle of HER2-targeted therapy aids the identification of tumors that ultimately undergo pCR, outperforming pre-treatment measures or transcriptomic changes. We further developed and validated a classifier that robustly predicted pCR using a single marker, CD45, measured on treatment, and showed that CD45-positive cell counts measured via conventional immunohistochemistry perform comparably. These results demonstrate robust biomarkers that can be used to enable the stratification of sensitive tumors early during neoadjuvant HER2-targeted therapy, with implications for tailoring subsequent therapy
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Deterministic evolution and stringent selection during preneoplasia.
Acknowledgements: We thank Z. Hu, S. Tilk, L. Attardi and A. Bhatt for helpful discussions, the Stanford University Hospital Tissue Procurement Shared Resource facility for specimen procurement and the Stanford Functional Genomics Core for assistance with sequencing. This work was supported by the US Department of Health & Human Services National Institutes of Health Director’s Pioneer Award (no. DP1-CA238296) to C.C. and a National Cancer Institute Cancer Target Discovery and Development Center (no. U01-CA217851) to C.J.K. and C.C. K. Karlsson was supported in part by a Swedish Research Council (Ventenskapsradet) International postdoctoral grant (no. 2018-00454).The earliest events during human tumour initiation, although poorly characterized, may hold clues to malignancy detection and prevention1. Here we model occult preneoplasia by biallelic inactivation of TP53, a common early event in gastric cancer, in human gastric organoids. Causal relationships between this initiating genetic lesion and resulting phenotypes were established using experimental evolution in multiple clonally derived cultures over 2 years. TP53 loss elicited progressive aneuploidy, including copy number alterations and structural variants prevalent in gastric cancers, with evident preferred orders. Longitudinal single-cell sequencing of TP53-deficient gastric organoids similarly indicates progression towards malignant transcriptional programmes. Moreover, high-throughput lineage tracing with expressed cellular barcodes demonstrates reproducible dynamics whereby initially rare subclones with shared transcriptional programmes repeatedly attain clonal dominance. This powerful platform for experimental evolution exposes stringent selection, clonal interference and a marked degree of phenotypic convergence in premalignant epithelial organoids. These data imply predictability in the earliest stages of tumorigenesis and show evolutionary constraints and barriers to malignant transformation, with implications for earlier detection and interception of aggressive, genome-instable tumours
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Pathologic and molecular responses to neoadjuvant trastuzumab and/or lapatinib from a phase II randomized trial in HER2-positive breast cancer (TRIO-US B07).
In this multicenter, open-label, randomized phase II investigator-sponsored neoadjuvant trial with funding provided by Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline (TRIO-US B07, Clinical Trials NCT00769470), participants with early-stage HER2-positive breast cancer (N = 128) were recruited from 13 United States oncology centers throughout the Translational Research in Oncology network. Participants were randomized to receive trastuzumab (T; N = 34), lapatinib (L; N = 36), or both (TL; N = 58) as HER2-targeted therapy, with each participant given one cycle of this designated anti-HER2 therapy alone followed by six cycles of standard combination chemotherapy with the same anti-HER2 therapy. The primary objective was to estimate the rate of pathologic complete response (pCR) at the time of surgery in each of the three arms. In the intent-to-treat population, we observed similar pCR rates between T (47%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 30-65%) and TL (52%, 95% CI 38-65%), and a lower pCR rate with L (25%, 95% CI 13-43%). In the T arm, 100% of participants completed all protocol-specified treatment prior to surgery, as compared to 69% in the L arm and 74% in the TL arm. Tumor or tumor bed tissue was collected whenever possible pre-treatment (N = 110), after one cycle of HER2-targeted therapy alone (N = 89), and at time of surgery (N = 59). Higher-level amplification of HER2 and hormone receptor (HR)-negative status were associated with a higher pCR rate. Large shifts in the tumor, immune, and stromal gene expression occurred after one cycle of HER2-targeted therapy. In contrast to pCR rates, the L-containing arms exhibited greater proliferation reduction than T at this timepoint. Immune expression signatures increased in all arms after one cycle of HER2-targeted therapy, decreasing again by the time of surgery. Our results inform approaches to early assessment of sensitivity to anti-HER2 therapy and shed light on the role of the immune microenvironment in response to HER2-targeted agents