Resolving therapy resistance mechanisms in multiple myeloma by multiomics subclone analysis

Alexandra M. Poos(German Cancer Research Center), Nina Prokoph(German Cancer Research Center), Moritz J. Przybilla(German Cancer Research Center), Jan‐Philipp Mallm(German Cancer Research Center), Simon Steiger(German Cancer Research Center), Isabelle Seufert(German Cancer Research Center), Lukas John(German Cancer Research Center), Stephan M. Tirier(German Cancer Research Center), Katharina Bauer(German Cancer Research Center), Anja Baumann(German Cancer Research Center), Jennifer Rohleder(German Cancer Research Center), Umair Munawar(Universitätsklinikum Würzburg), Leo Rasche(Universitätsklinikum Würzburg), K. Martin Kortüm(Universitätsklinikum Würzburg), Nicola Giesen(German Cancer Research Center), Philipp Reichert(Heidelberg University), Stefanie Huhn(Heidelberg University), Carsten Müller‐Tidow(Heidelberg University), Hartmut Goldschmidt(Heidelberg University), Oliver Stegle(German Cancer Research Center), Marc S. Raab(German Cancer Research Center), Karsten Rippe(German Cancer Research Center), Niels Weinhold(Heidelberg University)
Blood
June 30, 2023
Cited by 59Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Intratumor heterogeneity as a clinical challenge becomes most evident after several treatment lines, when multidrug-resistant subclones accumulate. To address this challenge, the characterization of resistance mechanisms at the subclonal level is key to identify common vulnerabilities. In this study, we integrate whole-genome sequencing, single-cell (sc) transcriptomics (scRNA sequencing), and chromatin accessibility (scATAC sequencing) together with mitochondrial DNA mutations to define subclonal architecture and evolution for longitudinal samples from 15 patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. We assess transcriptomic and epigenomic changes to resolve the multifactorial nature of therapy resistance and relate it to the parallel occurrence of different mechanisms: (1) preexisting epigenetic profiles of subclones associated with survival advantages, (2) converging phenotypic adaptation of genetically distinct subclones, and (3) subclone-specific interactions of myeloma and bone marrow microenvironment cells. Our study showcases how an integrative multiomics analysis can be applied to track and characterize distinct multidrug-resistant subclones over time for the identification of molecular targets against them.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis