Diverse drug-resistance mechanisms can emerge from drug-tolerant cancer persister cells

Michael E. Ramirez(University of California, San Francisco), Satwik Rajaram(University of California, San Francisco), Robert J. Steininger(Center for Systems Biology), Daria Osipchuk(University of California, San Francisco), Maike Roth(University of California, San Francisco), Leanna S. Morinishi(University of California, San Francisco), Louise Evans(University of California, San Francisco), Weiyue Ji(University of California, San Francisco), Chien-Hsiang Hsu(University of California, San Francisco), Kevin Thurley(University of California, San Francisco), Shuguang Wei(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Anwu Zhou(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Prasad Koduru(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Bruce A. Posner(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Lani F. Wu(University of California, San Francisco), Steven J. Altschuler(University of California, San Francisco)
Nature Communications
February 19, 2016
Cited by 585Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer therapy has traditionally focused on eliminating fast-growing populations of cells. Yet, an increasing body of evidence suggests that small subpopulations of cancer cells can evade strong selective drug pressure by entering a 'persister' state of negligible growth. This drug-tolerant state has been hypothesized to be part of an initial strategy towards eventual acquisition of bona fide drug-resistance mechanisms. However, the diversity of drug-resistance mechanisms that can expand from a persister bottleneck is unknown. Here we compare persister-derived, erlotinib-resistant colonies that arose from a single, EGFR-addicted lung cancer cell. We find, using a combination of large-scale drug screening and whole-exome sequencing, that our erlotinib-resistant colonies acquired diverse resistance mechanisms, including the most commonly observed clinical resistance mechanisms. Thus, the drug-tolerant persister state does not limit--and may even provide a latent reservoir of cells for--the emergence of heterogeneous drug-resistance mechanisms.


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