bims-tumhet Biomed News
on Tumor Heterogeneity
Issue of 2023‒01‒29
seven papers selected by
Sergio Marchini
Humanitas Research


  1. Cancer Cell Int. 2023 Jan 25. 23(1): 11
      Ovarian cancer (OC) is one of the most common gynecological malignancies with high morbidity and mortality. The peritoneum is one of the most common metastatic sites in ovarian cancer, involving large amounts of ascites. However, its mechanism is unclear. The peritoneal microenvironment composed of peritoneal effusion and peritoneum creates favorable conditions for ovarian cancer progression and metastasis. Here, we reviewed the peritoneal metastasis patterns and molecular mechanisms of ovarian cancer, as well as major components of the peritoneal microenvironment, peritoneal effusion, and immune microenvironment, and investigated the relationship between the peritoneal microenvironment and ovarian cancer metastasis.
    Keywords:  Metastasis; Ovarian cancer; Tumor microenvironment
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1186/s12935-023-02854-5
  2. Curr Oncol Rep. 2023 Jan 27.
      PURPOSE OF REVIEW: New therapies are needed to potentiate the effects of current immunotherapies and overcome resistance. The stimulator of interferon genes genes (STING) pathway is an innate immune activating cascade that may enhance current cancer immunotherapies.RECENT FINDINGS: Preclinical data has shown that the addition of a STING agonist enhances the effect of current treatments such as immune checkpoint inhibitor antibodies and radiation therapy. Early phase trials have demonstrated modest efficacy of STING agonists and revealed new mechanistic and technical challenges. STING agonists are a new class of agents that activate the immune response to improve tumor control. A wide range of preclinical experiments, translational data, and ongoing clinical trials support the therapeutic use of STING agonists in patients. Trials to determine optimal drug combinations and novel delivery mechanisms are continuing in development.
    Keywords:  Anti-tumor immunity; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Immunotherapy; Innate immune activation; STING agonist; Tumor microenvironment
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1007/s11912-023-01361-0
  3. Mol Oncol. 2023 Jan 24.
      Genomic analysis, performed on tumoral tissue DNA and on circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) from blood is the cornerstone of precision cancer medicine. Herein, we characterized the clinical prognostic implications of the concordance of alterations in major cancer genes between tissue- and blood-derived DNA in a pan-cancer cohort. The molecular profiles of both liquid (Guardant Health) and tissue (Foundation Medicine) biopsies from 433 patients were analysed. Mutations and amplifications of cancer genes scored by these two tests were assessed. In 184 (42.5%) patients, there was at least one mutual gene alteration. The mean number of mutual gene-level alterations in the samples was 0.67 per patient (range 0-5). A higher mutual gene-level alteration number correlated with shorter overall survival (OS). As confirmed in multivariable analysis, patients with >2 mutual gene-level alterations in blood and tissue had a hazard ratio (HR) of death of 1.49 (95% CI=1-2.2) (p=0.047), whereas patients with >3 mutual gene-level alterations had a HR of death 2.38 (95% CI=1.47-3.87) (p=0.0005). Together, our results show that gene-level concordance between tissue DNA and ctDNA analysis is prevalent and is an independent factor predicting significantly shorter patient survival.
    Keywords:  cancer; circulating DNA; genomics; survival; tissue DNA
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13383
  4. Mol Cancer. 2023 Jan 21. 22(1): 15
      BACKGROUND: Despite advances in early detection and therapies, cancer is still one of the most common causes of death worldwide. Since each tumor is unique, there is a need to implement personalized care and develop robust tools for monitoring treatment response to assess drug efficacy and prevent disease relapse.MAIN BODY: Recent developments in liquid biopsies have enabled real-time noninvasive monitoring of tumor burden through the detection of molecules shed by tumors in the blood. These molecules include circulating tumor nucleic acids (ctNAs), comprising cell-free DNA or RNA molecules passively and/or actively released from tumor cells. Often highlighted for their diagnostic, predictive, and prognostic potential, these biomarkers possess valuable information about tumor characteristics and evolution. While circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has been in the spotlight for the last decade, less is known about circulating tumor RNA (ctRNA). There are unanswered questions about why some tumors shed high amounts of ctNAs while others have undetectable levels. Also, there are gaps in our understanding of associations between tumor evolution and ctNA characteristics and shedding kinetics. In this review, we summarize current knowledge about ctNA biology and release mechanisms and put this information into the context of tumor evolution and clinical utility.
    CONCLUSIONS: A deeper understanding of the biology of ctDNA and ctRNA may inform the use of liquid biopsies in personalized medicine to improve cancer patient outcomes.
    Keywords:  Biomarkers; Cell-free DNA; Circulating tumor DNA; Circulating tumor RNA; Clinical application; Liquid biopsy; Precision oncology; Shedding mechanisms
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1186/s12943-022-01710-w
  5. Sci Rep. 2023 Jan 27. 13(1): 1537
      Long interspersed element 1 (LINE-1) open reading frame 1 protein (ORF1p) expression is a common feature of many cancer types, including high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC). Here, we report that ORF1p is not only expressed but also released by ovarian cancer and primary tumor cells. Immuno-multiple reaction monitoring-mass spectrometry assays showed that released ORF1p is confidently detectable in conditioned media, ascites, and patients' plasma, implicating ORF1p as a potential biomarker. Interestingly, ORF1p expression is detectable in fallopian tube (FT) epithelial precursors of HGSOC but not in benign FT, suggesting that ORF1p expression in an early event in HGSOC development. Finally, treatment of FT cells with DNA methyltransferase inhibitors led to robust expression and release of ORF1p, validating the regulatory role of DNA methylation in LINE-1 repression in non-tumorigenic tissue.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-28840-5
  6. Bioinform Adv. 2022 ;2(1): vbac062
      Motivation: Single-cell sequencing now enables the recovery of full-length immune receptor repertoires [B cell receptor (BCR) and T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires], in addition to gene expression information. The feature-rich datasets produced from such experiments require extensive and diverse computational analyses, each of which can significantly influence the downstream immunological interpretations, such as clonal selection and expansion. Simulations produce validated standard datasets, where the underlying generative model can be precisely defined and furthermore perturbed to investigate specific questions of interest. Currently, there is no tool that can be used to simulate single-cell datasets incorporating immune receptor repertoires and gene expression.Results: We developed Echidna, an R package that simulates immune receptors and transcriptomes at single-cell resolution with user-tunable parameters controlling a wide range of features such as clonal expansion, germline gene usage, somatic hypermutation, transcriptional phenotypes and spatial location. Echidna can additionally simulate time-resolved B cell evolution, producing mutational networks with complex selection histories incorporating class-switching and B cell subtype information. We demonstrated the benchmarking potential of Echidna by simulating clonal lineages and comparing the known simulated networks with those inferred from only the BCR sequences as input. Finally, we simulated immune repertoire information onto existing spatial transcriptomic experiments, thereby generating novel datasets that could be used to develop and integrate methods to profile clonal selection in a spatially resolved manner. Together, Echidna provides a framework that can incorporate experimental data to simulate single-cell immune repertoires to aid software development and bioinformatic benchmarking of clonotyping, phylogenetics, transcriptomics and machine learning strategies.
    Availability and implementation: The R package and code used in this manuscript can be found at github.com/alexyermanos/echidna and also in the R package Platypus (Yermanos et al., 2021). Installation instructions and the vignette for Echidna is described in the Platypus Computational Ecosystem (https://alexyermanos.github.io/Platypus/index.html). Publicly available data and corresponding sample accession numbers can be found in Supplementary Tables S2 and S3.
    Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics Advances online.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1093/bioadv/vbac062
  7. Gigascience. 2022 Dec 28. pii: giac128. [Epub ahead of print]12
      BACKGROUND: Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare understudied cancer associated with exposure to asbestos. So far, MPM patients have benefited marginally from the genomics medicine revolution due to the limited size or breadth of existing molecular studies. In the context of the MESOMICS project, we have performed the most comprehensive molecular characterization of MPM to date, with the underlying dataset made of the largest whole-genome sequencing series yet reported, together with transcriptome sequencing and methylation arrays for 120 MPM patients.RESULTS: We first provide comprehensive quality controls for all samples, of both raw and processed data. Due to the difficulty in collecting specimens from such rare tumors, a part of the cohort does not include matched normal material. We provide a detailed analysis of data processing of these tumor-only samples, showing that all somatic alteration calls match very stringent criteria of precision and recall. Finally, integrating our data with previously published multiomic MPM datasets (n = 374 in total), we provide an extensive molecular phenotype map of MPM based on the multitask theory. The generated map can be interactively explored and interrogated on the UCSC TumorMap portal (https://tumormap.ucsc.edu/?p=RCG_MESOMICS/MPM_Archetypes ).
    CONCLUSIONS: This new high-quality MPM multiomics dataset, together with the state-of-art bioinformatics and interactive visualization tools we provide, will support the development of precision medicine in MPM that is particularly challenging to implement in rare cancers due to limited molecular studies.
    Keywords:  DNA methylation; cancer tasks; genomics; malignant pleural mesothelioma; quality control; transcriptomics; tumor map
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giac128