Relapse-Fated Latent Diagnosis Subclones in Acute B Lineage Leukemia Are Drug Tolerant and Possess Distinct Metabolic Programs

Stephanie M. Dobson(University of Toronto), Laura García‐Prat(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Robert J. Vanner(University of Toronto), Jeffrey A. Wintersinger(University of Toronto), Esmé Waanders(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Zhaohui Gu(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Jessica McLeod(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Olga I. Gan(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Ildiko Grandal(Hospital for Sick Children), Debbie Payne-Turner(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Michael N. Edmonson(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Xiaotu Ma(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Yiping Fan(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Véronique Voisin(University of Toronto), Michelle Chan‐Seng‐Yue(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Stephanie Z. Xie(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Mohsen Hosseini(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Sagi Abelson(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Pankaj Gupta(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Michael Rusch(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Ying Shao(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Scott R. Olsen(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Geoffrey Neale(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Steven M. Chan(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre), Gary D. Bader(University of Toronto), John Easton(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Cynthia J. Guidos(University of Toronto), Jayne S. Danska(University of Toronto), Jinghui Zhang(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Mark D. Minden(University of Toronto), Quaid Morris(University of Toronto), Charles G. Mullighan(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), John E. Dick(University of Toronto)
Cancer Discovery
February 21, 2020
Cited by 101Open Access
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Abstract

Disease recurrence causes significant mortality in B-progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). Genomic analysis of matched diagnosis and relapse samples shows relapse often arising from minor diagnosis subclones. However, why therapy eradicates some subclones while others survive and progress to relapse remains obscure. Elucidation of mechanisms underlying these differing fates requires functional analysis of isolated subclones. Here, large-scale limiting dilution xenografting of diagnosis and relapse samples, combined with targeted sequencing, identified and isolated minor diagnosis subclones that initiate an evolutionary trajectory toward relapse [termed diagnosis Relapse Initiating clones (dRI)]. Compared with other diagnosis subclones, dRIs were drug-tolerant with distinct engraftment and metabolic properties. Transcriptionally, dRIs displayed enrichment for chromatin remodeling, mitochondrial metabolism, proteostasis programs, and an increase in stemness pathways. The isolation and characterization of dRI subclones reveals new avenues for eradicating dRI cells by targeting their distinct metabolic and transcriptional pathways before further evolution renders them fully therapy-resistant. SIGNIFICANCE: Isolation and characterization of subclones from diagnosis samples of patients with B-ALL who relapsed showed that relapse-fated subclones had increased drug tolerance and distinct metabolic and survival transcriptional programs compared with other diagnosis subclones. This study provides strategies to identify and target clinically relevant subclones before further evolution toward relapse.


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