4.8 Article

Reliance upon ancestral mutations is maintained in colorectal cancers that heterogeneously evolve during targeted therapies

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04506-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Community [602901 MErCuRIC]
  2. H2020 grant [635342-2 MoTriColor]
  3. IMI contract [115749 CANCER-ID]
  4. AIRC 2010 Special Program Molecular Clinical Oncology 5 per mille [9970]
  5. AIRC IG [16788, 17707, 20885]
  6. Fondazione Piemontese per la Ricerca sul Cancro-ONLUS 5 per mille Ministero della Salute
  7. Fondazione Piemontese per la Ricerca sul Cancro-ONLUS Innovation 5 per mille 2012 MIUR
  8. Terapia Molecolare Tumori by Fondazione Oncologia Niguarda Onlus
  9. Genomic-Based Triage for Target Therapy in Colorectal Cancer Ministero della Salute [NET 02352137]

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Attempts at eradicating metastatic cancers with targeted therapies are limited by the emergence of resistant subclones bearing heterogeneous (epi) genetic changes. We used colorectal cancer (CRC) to test the hypothesis that interfering with an ancestral oncogenic event shared by all the malignant cells (such as WNT pathway alterations) could override heterogeneous mechanisms of acquired drug resistance. Here, we report that in CRCresistant cell populations, phylogenetic analysis uncovers a complex subclonal architecture, indicating parallel evolution of multiple independent cellular lineages. Functional and pharmacological modulation of WNT signalling induces cell death in CRC preclinical models from patients that relapsed during the treatment, regardless of the drug type or resistance mechanisms. Concomitant blockade of WNT and MAPK signalling restrains the emergence of drug- resistant clones. Reliance upon the WNT- APC pathway is preserved throughout the branched genomic drift associated with emergence of treatment relapse, thus offering the possibility of a common therapeutic strategy to overcome secondary drug resistance.

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