Literature DB >> 16688757

Stochastic cancer progression driven by non-clonal chromosome aberrations.

Henry H Q Heng1, Joshua B Stevens, Gou Liu, Steven W Bremer, Karen J Ye, Prem-Veer Reddy, Gen Sheng Wu, Y Alan Wang, Michael A Tainsky, Christine J Ye.   

Abstract

Cancer research has previously focused on the identification of specific genes and pathways responsible for cancer initiation and progression based on the prevailing viewpoint that cancer is caused by a stepwise accumulation of genetic aberrations. This viewpoint, however, is not consistent with the clinical finding that tumors display high levels of genetic heterogeneity and distinctive karyotypes. We show that chromosomal instability primarily generates stochastic karyotypic changes leading to the random progression of cancer. This was accomplished by tracing karyotypic patterns of individual cells that contained either defective genes responsible for genome integrity or were challenged by onco-proteins or carcinogens that destabilized the genome. Analysis included the tracing of patterns of karyotypic evolution during different stages of cellular immortalization. This study revealed that non-clonal chromosomal aberrations (NCCAs) (both aneuploidy and structural aberrations) and not recurrent clonal chromosomal aberrations (CCAs) are directly linked to genomic instability and karyotypic evolution. Discovery of "transitional CCAs" during in vitro immortalization clearly demonstrates that karyotypic evolution in solid tumors is not a continuous process. NCCAs and their dynamic interplay with CCAs create infinite genomic combinations leading to clonal diversity necessary for cancer cell evolution. The karyotypic chaos observed within the cell crisis stage prior to establishment of the immortalization further supports the ultimate importance of genetic aberrations at the karyotypic or genome level. Therefore, genomic instability generated NCCAs are a key driving force in cancer progression. The dynamic relationship between NCCAs and CCAs provides a mechanism underlying chromosomal based cancer evolution and could have broad clinical applications.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16688757     DOI: 10.1002/jcp.20685

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Physiol        ISSN: 0021-9541            Impact factor:   6.384


  44 in total

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3.  Unstable genomes elevate transcriptome dynamics.

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4.  Single cell heterogeneity: why unstable genomes are incompatible with average profiles.

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5.  Distinguishing constitutional and acquired nonclonal aneuploidy.

Authors:  Henry H Heng
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-01-31       Impact factor: 11.205

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7.  aCGH local copy number aberrations associated with overall copy number genomic instability in colorectal cancer: coordinate involvement of the regions including BCR and ABL.

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8.  Chromosomal heterogeneity and instability characterize pediatric medulloblastoma cell lines and affect neoplastic phenotype.

Authors:  Angel Mauricio Castro-Gamero; Kleiton Silva Borges; Regia Caroline Lira; Augusto Faria Andrade; Paola Fernanda Fedatto; Gustavo Alencastro Veiga Cruzeiro; Ricardo Bonfim Silva; Aparecida Maria Fontes; Elvis Terci Valera; Michael Bobola; Carlos Alberto Scrideli; Luiz Gonzaga Tone
Journal:  Cytotechnology       Date:  2013-01-17       Impact factor: 2.058

9.  Comparison of mitotic cell death by chromosome fragmentation to premature chromosome condensation.

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10.  Computational systems biology in cancer: modeling methods and applications.

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