Chromosomal instability accelerates the evolution of resistance to anti-cancer therapies

Devon A. Lukow(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Erin L. Sausville(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Pavit Suri(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Narendra Kumar Chunduri(University of Kaiserslautern), Justin Leu(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Jude Kendall(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Zihua Wang(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Zuzana Štorchová(University of Kaiserslautern), Jason M. Sheltzer(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
September 26, 2020
Cited by 31Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Aneuploidy is a ubiquitous feature of human tumors, but the acquisition of aneuploidy is typically detrimental to cellular fitness. To investigate how aneuploidy could contribute to tumor growth, we triggered periods of chromosomal instability (CIN) in human cells and then exposed them to a variety of different culture environments. While chromosomal instability was universally detrimental under normal growth conditions, we discovered that transient CIN reproducibly accelerated the ability of cells to adapt and thrive in the presence of anti-cancer therapeutic agents. Single-cell sequencing revealed that these drug-resistant populations recurrently developed specific whole-chromosome gains and losses. We independently derived one aneuploidy that was frequently recovered in cells exposed to paclitaxel, and we found that this chromosome loss event was sufficient to decrease paclitaxel sensitivity. Finally, we demonstrated that intrinsic levels of CIN correlate with poor responses to a variety of systemic therapies in a collection of patient-derived xenografts. In total, our results show that while chromosomal instability generally antagonizes cell fitness, it also provides phenotypic plasticity to cancer cells that can allow them to adapt to diverse stressful environments. Moreover, our findings suggest that aneuploidy may function as an under-explored cause of therapy failure in human tumors.


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