1. Evolution of core archetypal phenotypes in progressive high grade serous ovarian cancer
- Author
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Hoda Mirsafian, David D.L. Bowtell, Theresa L. Werner, Nadia Traficante, Stephen J. Lee, Elizabeth L. Christie, Sian Fereday, Sumana Majumdar, Ravi Salgia, Adam L. Cohen, Ernest S. Han, Benjamin Copeland, Andrea Bild, Patrick A. Cosgrove, Edward Wang, Philip J. Moos, Mihaela C. Cristea, Jeffrey T. Chang, Aritro Nath, and Lance Pflieger
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,DNA Repair ,endocrine system diseases ,Tumour heterogeneity ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Cellular defense response ,Biology ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Functional clustering ,Transcriptome ,Genetic Heterogeneity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ovarian cancer ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Multidisciplinary ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,Genetic heterogeneity ,General Chemistry ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous ,Serous fluid ,030104 developmental biology ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Mutation ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,Female - Abstract
The evolution of resistance in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) cells following chemotherapy is only partially understood. To understand the selection of factors driving heterogeneity before and through adaptation to treatment, we profile single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) transcriptomes of HGSOC tumors collected longitudinally during therapy. We analyze scRNA-seq data from two independent patient cohorts to reveal that HGSOC is driven by three archetypal phenotypes, defined as oncogenic states that describe the majority of the transcriptome variation. Using a multi-task learning approach to identify the biological tasks of each archetype, we identify metabolism and proliferation, cellular defense response, and DNA repair signaling as consistent cell states found across patients. Our analysis demonstrates a shift in favor of the metabolism and proliferation archetype versus cellular defense response archetype in cancer cells that received multiple lines of treatment. While archetypes are not consistently associated with specific whole-genome driver mutations, they are closely associated with subclonal populations at the single-cell level, indicating that subclones within a tumor often specialize in unique biological tasks. Our study reveals the core archetypes found in progressive HGSOC and shows consistent enrichment of subclones with the metabolism and proliferation archetype as resistance is acquired to multiple lines of therapy., High-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) is prone to developing resistance to treatment. Here, the authors use single-cell RNA-seq and an analysis of archetypes, and find that shifts in metabolism and proliferation are associated with the response to treatment and clonal heterogeneity in HGSOC.
- Published
- 2021
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