This standard model for the evolution of cancer progression may be challenged by data from a new study describing massive tumor heterogeneity. [Darryl Leja, NHGRI]
This standard model for the evolution of cancer progression may be challenged by data from a new study describing massive tumor heterogeneity. [Darryl Leja, NHGRI]

New answers may have just emerged in a long-standing debate in the field of oncology and molecular evolution. The neutral theory of molecular evolution states that changes occurring at the molecular level are not caused by natural selection, but rather by the random genetic drift of mutant alleles. In contrast, Darwinian selection adheres to the idea that a molecular mutation holds some selective advantage over the wild-type, allowing it to thrive.

When viewing these two theories through the lens of carcinogenesis, it is not difficult to envision the applicability of either theory. However now, new evidence from scientists at the University of Chicago and the Beijing Institute of Genomics may tip the scales in favor of neutral theory. This collaborative scientific effort assembled data from one of the most rigorous genetic sequencing ever carried out on a single tumor—revealing a much greater level of genetic diversity than expected.

The investigators excised a tumor roughly 3.5 centimeters in diameter (slightly smaller than a ping-pong ball), from a hepatocellular carcinoma tumor of the liver. The research team estimated that the tumor contained more than 100 million distinct mutations within genetic coding regions, which is thousands of times more than they anticipated. The impact of this finding is that even microscopic tumors are likely to contain extremely high genetic diversity and with so much variation there are likely many cells contained within able to resist standard post-surgical cancer treatment such as chemotherapy and radiation.        

“With 100 million mutations, each capable of altering a protein in some way, there is a high probability that a significant minority of tumor cells will survive, even after aggressive treatment,” explained study director Chung-I Wu, Ph.D., professor of ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago. “In a setting with so much diversity, those cells could multiply to form new tumors, which would be resistant to standard treatments.”

The findings from this study were published recently in PNAS through an article entitled “Extremely high genetic diversity in a single tumor points to prevalence of non-Darwinian cell evolution.”

Scientists at the Beijing Institute of Genomics sampled nearly 300 regions from one slice of the hepatocellular tumor and sequenced or genotyped each one searching for genetic changes. Once they analyzed their data and applied a modern population genetic theory, their results lead them to the 100 million coding-region mutation estimate for the whole tumor.

This extensive level of heterogeneity within a single tumor, which is way beyond what a Darwinian process would permit, makes the selectionism vs. neutralism debate of the 1980s “suddenly medically relevant,” Dr. Wu remarked. Since previous to the current study, no one had ever genetically dissected a tumor as thoroughly, the commonly held theory was that tumors had from a few hundred up to 20,000 genetic alterations that were not present in the patient's healthy cells.  

“Our study is the non-Darwinian process writ small, down to the cellular level,” Dr. Wu noted. “In the Darwinian struggle, there are—from the tumor's point of view—few beneficial mutations, meaning changes that give tumor cells a growth advantage. When there are no such limits on genetic variation, however, mutations can emerge and apparently thrive.”

“This could potentially change how we think about tumor growth and spread, but the direct clinical implications of this study may not be obvious on the surface,” added co-author Daniel Catenacci, M.D., assistant professor and medical oncologist at the University of Chicago.

While the bulk of the mutations were at very low frequencies, drug intervention could provide some of the genetic mutations with a progression path forward. 

“The presence of so many random mutations could present a problem to specifically targeted therapies,” Dr. Catenacci stated. “It almost guarantees that some cells will be resistant. But it also suggests that aggressive treatment could push tumor cells into a more Darwinian mode.”

Since the current study only focused on a single tumor type, it remains to be seen how comparable this data will be for other types of cancerous tumors. However, regardless of narrow focus, the results from this analysis raises important question about tumor evolution and heterogeneity.

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