4.8 Article

The Life History of 21 Breast Cancers

Journal

CELL
Volume 149, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.04.023

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [098051]
  2. Breakthrough Breast Cancer Research [ICGC 08/09]
  3. National Research Council Canada
  4. EMBO
  5. International Human Frontier Science Program Organization
  6. Netherlands Genomics Initiative (NGI)/Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  7. Norwegian Research Council
  8. Norwegian Cancer Society
  9. Radium Hospital Foundation
  10. Health Region South-East
  11. European Community [242006]
  12. National Cancer Institute Specialized Program Of Research Excellence [CA089393]
  13. Department of Health via the National Institute for Health Research comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre
  14. St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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Cancer evolves dynamically as clonal expansions supersede one another driven by shifting selective pressures, mutational processes, and disrupted cancer genes. These processes mark the genome, such that a cancer's life history is encrypted in the somatic mutations present. We developed algorithms to decipher this narrative and applied them to 21 breast cancers. Mutational processes evolve across a cancer's lifespan, with many emerging late but contributing extensive genetic variation. Subclonal diversification is prominent, and most mutations are found in just a fraction of tumor cells. Every tumor has a dominant subclonal lineage, representing more than 50% of tumor cells. Minimal expansion of these subclones occurs until many hundreds to thousands of mutations have accumulated, implying the existence of long-lived, quiescent cell lineages capable of substantial proliferation upon acquisition of enabling genomic changes. Expansion of the dominant subclone to an appreciable mass may therefore represent the final rate-limiting step in a breast cancer's development, triggering diagnosis.

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