作者
Michelle Chan‐Seng‐Yue,Jaeseung Kim,Gavin W. Wilson,K.T. Ng,Eugenia Flores‐Figueroa,Grainne M. O’Kane,Ashton A. Connor,Robert E. Denroche,Robert C. Grant,Jessica McLeod,Julie M. Wilson,Gun Ho Jang,Amy Zhang,Anna Dodd,Sheng‐Ben Liang,Ayelet Borgida,Dianne Chadwick,Sangeetha Kalimuthu,Ilinca M. Lungu,John M.S. Bartlett,Paul M. Krzyzanowski,Vandana Sandhu,Hervé Tiriac,Fieke E. M. Froeling,Joanna M. Karasinska,James T. Topham,Daniel J. Renouf,David F. Schaeffer,Steven J.M. Jones,Marco A. Marra,Janessa Laskin,Runjan Chetty,Lincoln Stein,George Zogopoulos,Benjamin Haibe‐Kains,Peter J. Campbell,David A. Tuveson,Jennifer J. Knox,Sandra E. Fischer,Steven Gallinger,Faiyaz Notta
摘要
Pancreatic adenocarcinoma presents as a spectrum of a highly aggressive disease in patients. The basis of this disease heterogeneity has proved difficult to resolve due to poor tumor cellularity and extensive genomic instability. To address this, a dataset of whole genomes and transcriptomes was generated from purified epithelium of primary and metastatic tumors. Transcriptome analysis demonstrated that molecular subtypes are a product of a gene expression continuum driven by a mixture of intratumoral subpopulations, which was confirmed by single-cell analysis. Integrated whole-genome analysis uncovered that molecular subtypes are linked to specific copy number aberrations in genes such as mutant KRAS and GATA6. By mapping tumor genetic histories, tetraploidization emerged as a key mutational process behind these events. Taken together, these data support the premise that the constellation of genomic aberrations in the tumor gives rise to the molecular subtype, and that disease heterogeneity is due to ongoing genomic instability during progression. Whole-genome sequencing, transcriptome sequencing and single-cell analysis of primary and metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma identify molecular subtypes and intratumor heterogeneity.