Exome Sequencing Reveals Both Dna Sequence And Copy Number Changes In Aml: Potential Driver Changes And Mechanisms Of Drug Resistance Revealed From Serial Samples From The Same Patients

Cancer Research(2012)

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摘要
Despite significant advances in characterizing the molecular genetics of AML, the clonal evolution of leukemic cells and the dynamic impact of genomic changes on the development of the disease and progression to drug resistance are not well understood. Here, we applied next-generation sequencing to quantify aberrant tumor subclones carrying specific mutant alleles of key cancer genes and developed a method to extract quantitative high-resolution copy number changes across the genome using exome sequencing data from matching cancer and normal DNA. Serial bone marrow (BM) samples collected from diagnosis to relapse to post-treatment drug resistance in a patient-centric manner made it possible to trace the clonal evolution of AML and to identify variants potentially involved in drug resistance. Exome sequencing from AML blast cells and normal skin biopsies was performed as part of the Finnish Hematology Registry and Biobanking (FHRB) effort. Consecutive paired samples from different patients revealed unique genetic patterns of clonal evolution and cancer progression in each patient. In a pre-resistant sample of one AML M5 patient, we identified four closely spaced insertions in the Wilm9s Tumor (WT1) suppressor gene, none of which appear on the same sequence reads. This suggests the presence of multiple distinct leukemic subclones even before treatment resistance and underscores the strong selective advantage conferred by WT1 mutations. After relapse, one of the subclones was lost, and another one significantly increased suggesting that the relapse arose from the expansion of a pre-existing resistant subclone. In this patient, recurrent clones otherwise featured similar copy number changes and the same fusion genes as the primary diagnostic sample. In another AML patient developing recurrence an opposite pattern was observed: The relapsed, drug-resistant cells displayed an enormous increase of small microdeletions compared to the diagnostic, pre-treatment sample, while almost all sequence-level alterations in potential cancer genes were the same between the two samples. This suggests that a distinct type of DNA repair deficiency may have contributed to the drug resistant clone in this patient. Conclusions: Exome sequencing from paired samples of AML cells before and after relapse makes it possible to trace the clonal evolution of the disease and study the impact of therapy both at the level of sequence alterations of key cancer genes and simultaneously at the level of copy number changes inferred from exome sequence data. This analysis has highlighted multiple genomic patterns by which resistance may evolve in vivo during cancer treatment. Refined bioinformatic analysis and interpretation of exome-seq data provides a rich resource to identify genetic biomarkers of drug response and minimal residual disease. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 103rd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2012 Mar 31-Apr 4; Chicago, IL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2012;72(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 5067. doi:1538-7445.AM2012-5067
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