Extremely high genetic diversity in a single tumor points to prevalence of non-Darwinian cell evolution

Shaoping Ling(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Zheng Hu(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Zuyu Yang(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Fang Yang(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Yawei Li(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Pei Lin(Sun Yat-sen University), Ke Chen(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Lili Dong(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Lihua Cao(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Yong Tao(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Lingtong Hao(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Qingjian Chen(Sun Yat-sen University), Qiang Gong(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Dafei Wu(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Wenjie Li(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Wenming Zhao(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Xiuyun Tian(Peking University), Chunyi Hao(Peking University), Eric A. Hungate(Peking University), Daniel V.T. Catenacci(University of Chicago), Richard R. Hudson(University of Chicago), Wen‐Hsiung Li(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Xuemei Lu(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Chung‐I Wu(Sun Yat-sen University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 11, 2015
Cited by 371Open Access
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Abstract

The prevailing view that the evolution of cells in a tumor is driven by Darwinian selection has never been rigorously tested. Because selection greatly affects the level of intratumor genetic diversity, it is important to assess whether intratumor evolution follows the Darwinian or the non-Darwinian mode of evolution. To provide the statistical power, many regions in a single tumor need to be sampled and analyzed much more extensively than has been attempted in previous intratumor studies. Here, from a hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tumor, we evaluated multiregional samples from the tumor, using either whole-exome sequencing (WES) (n = 23 samples) or genotyping (n = 286) under both the infinite-site and infinite-allele models of population genetics. In addition to the many single-nucleotide variations (SNVs) present in all samples, there were 35 "polymorphic" SNVs among samples. High genetic diversity was evident as the 23 WES samples defined 20 unique cell clones. With all 286 samples genotyped, clonal diversity agreed well with the non-Darwinian model with no evidence of positive Darwinian selection. Under the non-Darwinian model, MALL (the number of coding region mutations in the entire tumor) was estimated to be greater than 100 million in this tumor. DNA sequences reveal local diversities in small patches of cells and validate the estimation. In contrast, the genetic diversity under a Darwinian model would generally be orders of magnitude smaller. Because the level of genetic diversity will have implications on therapeutic resistance, non-Darwinian evolution should be heeded in cancer treatments even for microscopic tumors.


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