Journal
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.01055
Keywords
breast cancer; brain metastases; phylogenetics; deconvolution; pathways; gene modules; transcriptome; matrix factorization
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Funding
- U.S. N.I.H. [R21CA216452, R01HG010589]
- Pennsylvania Department of Health [4100070287]
- Breast Cancer Alliance
- Susan G. Komen for the Cure
- Center for Machine Learning and Healthcare at Carnegie Mellon University
- AWS Machine Learning Research Awards
- Mario Lemieux Foundation
- Pennsylvania Department of Health
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Metastasis is the primary mechanism by which cancer results in mortality and there are currently no reliable treatment options once it occurs, making the metastatic process a critical target for new diagnostics and therapeutics. Treating metastasis before it appears is challenging, however, in part because metastases may be quite distinct genomically from the primary tumors from which they presumably emerged. Phylogenetic studies of cancer development have suggested that changes in tumor genomics over stages of progression often result from shifts in the abundance of clonal cellular populations, as late stages of progression may derive from or select for clonal populations rare in the primary tumor. The present study develops computational methods to infer clonal heterogeneity and dynamics across progression stages via deconvolution and clonal phylogeny reconstruction of pathway-level expression signatures in order to reconstruct how these processes might influence average changes in genomic signatures over progression. We show, via application to a study of gene expression in a collection of matched breast primary tumor and metastatic samples, that the method can infer coarse-grained substructure and stromal infiltration across the metastatic transition. The results suggest that genomic changes observed in metastasis, such as gain of theErbBsignaling pathway, are likely caused by early events in clonal evolution followed by expansion of minor clonal populations in metastasis, a finding that may have translational implications for early detection or prevention of metastasis(1).
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