Phylogenetic analyses of melanoma reveal complex patterns of metastatic dissemination

Zack Sanborn, Jongsuk Chung(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Elizabeth Purdom(University of California, Berkeley), Nicholas J. Wang(Oregon Health & Science University), Hojabr Kakavand(Melanoma Institute Australia), James S. Wilmott(Melanoma Institute Australia), Timothy Butler(Oregon Health & Science University), John F. Thompson(The University of Sydney), Graham J. Mann(Melanoma Institute Australia), Lauren E. Haydu(Melanoma Institute Australia), Robyn P.M. Saw(The University of Sydney), Klaus J. Busam(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Roger S. Lo(University of California, Los Angeles), Eric A. Collisson(University of California, San Francisco), Joe S. Hur(Samsung (South Korea)), Paul T. Spellman(Oregon Health & Science University), James E. Cleaver(University of California, San Francisco), Joe W. Gray(Oregon Health & Science University), Nam Huh(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Rajmohan Murali(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Richard A. Scolyer(The University of Sydney), Boris C. Bastian(University of California, San Francisco), Raymond J. Cho(University of California, San Francisco)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 18, 2015
Cited by 193Open Access
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Abstract

Melanoma is difficult to treat once it becomes metastatic. However, the precise ancestral relationship between primary tumors and their metastases is not well understood. We performed whole-exome sequencing of primary melanomas and multiple matched metastases from eight patients to elucidate their phylogenetic relationships. In six of eight patients, we found that genetically distinct cell populations in the primary tumor metastasized in parallel to different anatomic sites, rather than sequentially from one site to the next. In five of these six patients, the metastasizing cells had themselves arisen from a common parental subpopulation in the primary, indicating that the ability to establish metastases is a late-evolving trait. Interestingly, we discovered that individual metastases were sometimes founded by multiple cell populations of the primary that were genetically distinct. Such establishment of metastases by multiple tumor subpopulations could help explain why identical resistance variants are identified in different sites after initial response to systemic therapy. One primary tumor harbored two subclones with different oncogenic mutations in CTNNB1, which were both propagated to the same metastasis, raising the possibility that activation of wingless-type mouse mammary tumor virus integration site (WNT) signaling may be involved, as has been suggested by experimental models.


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