학술논문

Analysis of the genetic phylogeny of multifocal prostate cancer identifies multiple independent clonal expansions in neoplastic and morphologically normal prostate tissue
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Genetics. 47(4)
Subject
Human Genome
Urologic Diseases
Prevention
Genetics
Prostate Cancer
Cancer
Aging
Case-Control Studies
Cell Lineage
Clonal Evolution
Clone Cells
DNA Mutational Analysis
Humans
Male
Mutation
Neoplasms
Multiple Primary
Phylogeny
Prostate
Prostatic Neoplasms
ICGC Prostate Group
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Language
Abstract
Genome-wide DNA sequencing was used to decrypt the phylogeny of multiple samples from distinct areas of cancer and morphologically normal tissue taken from the prostates of three men. Mutations were present at high levels in morphologically normal tissue distant from the cancer, reflecting clonal expansions, and the underlying mutational processes at work in morphologically normal tissue were also at work in cancer. Our observations demonstrate the existence of ongoing abnormal mutational processes, consistent with field effects, underlying carcinogenesis. This mechanism gives rise to extensive branching evolution and cancer clone mixing, as exemplified by the coexistence of multiple cancer lineages harboring distinct ERG fusions within a single cancer nodule. Subsets of mutations were shared either by morphologically normal and malignant tissues or between different ERG lineages, indicating earlier or separate clonal cell expansions. Our observations inform on the origin of multifocal disease and have implications for prostate cancer therapy in individual cases.