Genomic clustering of fitness-affecting mutations favors the evolution of chromosomal instability
Authored by Yevgeniy Raynes, Daniel M Weinreich
Date Published: 2019
DOI: 10.1111/eva.12717
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Abstract
Most solid cancers are characterized by chromosomal instability (CIN)-an
elevated rate of large-scale chromosomal aberrations and ploidy changes.
Chromosomal instability may arise through mutations in a range of
genomic integrity loci and is commonly associated with fast disease
progression, poor prognosis, and multidrug resistance. However, the
evolutionary forces promoting CIN-inducing alleles (hereafter, CIN
mutators) during carcinogenesis remain poorly understood. Here, we
develop a stochastic, individual-based model of indirect selection
experienced by CIN mutators via genomic associations with
fitness-affecting mutations. Because mutations associated with CIN
affect large swaths of the genome and have the potential to
simultaneously comprise many individual loci, we show that indirect
selection on CIN mutators is critically influenced by genome
organization. In particular, we find strong support for a key role
played by the spatial clustering of loci with either beneficial or
deleterious mutational effects. Genomic clustering of selected loci
allows CIN mutators to generate favorable chromosomal changes that
facilitate their rapid expansion within a neoplasm and, in turn,
accelerate carcinogenesis. We then examine the distribution of oncogenic
and tumor-suppressing loci in the human genome and find both to be
potentially more clustered along the chromosome than expected, leading
us to speculate that human genome may be susceptible to CIN hitchhiking.
More quantitative data on fitness effects of individual mutations will
be necessary, though, to assess the true levels of clustering in the
human genome and the effectiveness of indirect selection for CIN.
Finally, we use our model to examine how therapeutic strategies that
increase the deleterious burden of genetically unstable cells by raising
either the rate of CIN or the cost of deleterious mutations affect CIN
evolution. We find that both can inhibit CIN hitchhiking and delay
carcinogenesis in some circumstances, yet, in line with earlier work, we
find the latter to be considerably more effective.
Tags
Dynamics
tumor heterogeneity
Consequences
Origin
Passenger mutations
Carcinogenesis
Inactivation
Chromosomal instability
Indirect selection
Mutator
Microsatellite instability
Genetic instability
Colorectal-cancer
Aneuploidy