Quantifying cell divisions along evolutionary lineages in cancer
Publication date
2025-03
Authors
Blohmer, Martin
Cheek, David M.
Hung, Wei Ting
Kessler, Maria
Chatzidimitriou, Foivos
Wang, Jiahe
Hung, William
Lee, I. Hsiu
Gorelick, Alexander N.
Wassenaar, Emma
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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taverne
Abstract
Cell division drives somatic evolution but is challenging to quantify. We developed a framework to count cell divisions with DNA replication-related mutations in polyguanine homopolymers. Analyzing 505 samples from 37 patients, we studied the milestones of colorectal cancer evolution. Primary tumors diversify at ~250 divisions from the founder cell, while distant metastasis divergence occurs significantly later, at ~500 divisions. Notably, distant but not lymph node metastases originate from primary tumor regions that have undergone surplus divisions, tying subclonal expansion to metastatic capacity. Then, we analyzed a cohort of 73 multifocal lung cancers and showed that the cell division burden of the tumors’ common ancestor distinguishes independent primary tumors from intrapulmonary metastases and correlates with patient survival. In lung cancer too, metastatic capacity is tied to more extensive proliferation. The cell division history of human cancers is easily accessible using our simple framework and contains valuable biological and clinical information.
Keywords
Taverne, Genetics
Citation
Blohmer, M, Cheek, D M, Hung, W T, Kessler, M, Chatzidimitriou, F, Wang, J, Hung, W, Lee, I H, Gorelick, A N, Wassenaar, E C E, Yang, C Y, Yeh, Y C, Ho, H L, Speiser, D, Karsten, M M, Lanuti, M, Pai, S I, Kranenburg, O, Lennerz, J K, Chou, T Y, Kloor, M & Naxerova, K 2025, 'Quantifying cell divisions along evolutionary lineages in cancer', Nature genetics, vol. 57, no. 3, pp. 706–717. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-025-02078-5