作者
Yue Zhao,Xiao Fu,José I. López,Andrew Rowan,Lewis Au,Annika Fendler,Steve Hazell,Hang Xu,Stuart Horswell,Scott T.C. Shepherd,Lavinia Spain,Fiona Byrne,Gordon Stamp,Tim O’Brien,David Nicol,Marcellus Augustine,Ashish Chandra,Sarah Rudman,Antonia Toncheva,Lisa Pickering,Erik Sahai,James Larkin,Paul A. Bates,Charles Swanton,Samra Turajlic,Ben Challacombe,Simon Chowdhury,William Drake,Archana Fernando,Nicos Fotiadis,Andrew Furness,Emine Hatipoglu,Karen Harrison‐Phipps,Peter Hill,Catherine Horsfield,Teresa Marafioti,Jonathon Olsburgh,Alexander Polson,Sergio A. Quezada,Mary Varia,Hema Verma,Kevin Litchfield
摘要
The genetic evolutionary features of solid tumour growth are becoming increasingly well described, but the spatial and physical nature of subclonal growth remains unclear. Here, we utilize 102 macroscopic whole-tumour images from clear cell renal cell carcinoma patients, with matched genetic and phenotypic data from 756 biopsies. Utilizing a digital image processing pipeline, a renal pathologist marked the boundaries between tumour and normal tissue and extracted positions of boundary line and biopsy regions to X and Y coordinates. We then integrated coordinates with genomic data to map exact spatial subclone locations, revealing how genetically distinct subclones grow and evolve spatially. We observed a phenotype of advanced and more aggressive subclonal growth in the tumour centre, characterized by an elevated burden of somatic copy number alterations and higher necrosis, proliferation rate and Fuhrman grade. Moreover, we found that metastasizing subclones preferentially originate from the tumour centre. Collectively, these observations suggest a model of accelerated evolution in the tumour interior, with harsh hypoxic environmental conditions leading to a greater opportunity for driver somatic copy number alterations to arise and expand due to selective advantage. Tumour subclone growth is predominantly spatially contiguous in nature. We found only two cases of subclone dispersal, one of which was associated with metastasis. The largest subclones spatially were dominated by driver somatic copy number alterations, suggesting that a large selective advantage can be conferred to subclones upon acquisition of these alterations. In conclusion, spatial dynamics is strongly associated with genomic alterations and plays an important role in tumour evolution. The spatial and physical nature of tumour growth remains unclear. Combining whole-tumour images from clear cell renal cell carcinoma with genomic data, the authors show more aggressive subclonal growth and metastasizing subclones in the tumour centre.