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Evolutionary Biology Research Techniques
Predict Cancer
(Philadelphia - March 27, 2006) – In diverse ecosystems,
packed with wildly different species, evolution whizzes along. As
different species accumulate mutations, some adapt particularly
well to their environment and prosper. It happens in marine sediments,
mountain forests – and, as a new study illustrates, in precancerous
tumors, too.
In a study published online in Nature Genetics, Carlo
Maley, Ph.D., a researcher at
The Wistar Institute, and his colleagues report that precancerous
tumors containing a population of highly diverse cells were more
likely to evolve into cancer than those containing genetically similar
cells. The finding suggests that, in at least some forms of cancer,
the more genetically diverse a precancerous tumor is, the more likely
that tumor is to progress to full-blown cancer. If so, genetic diversity
might act as a biomarker for cancer risk among patients with precancerous
tissues.
“Although researchers first defined cancer in evolutionary
terms in the 1970s, few researchers have actually studied the disease
this way,” says Maley, lead author on the study and an assistant
professor in the molecular and cellular oncogenesis program at Wistar.
“We wanted to know: If we measured a precancerous tumor’s
genetic diversity at baseline, could we predict who would go on
to get cancer?”
To find out, the scientists decided to analyze data on a precancerous
condition called Barrett’s esophagus, in which cells lining
the lower esophagus change due to repeated exposure to stomach acid
from reflux, a condition often referred to as heartburn. Doctors
typically adopt a “wait and watch” approach to treating
patients with Barrett’s esophagus because the condition only
rarely leads to cancer and is difficult to treat surgically.
In the study, Maley and colleagues analyzed precancerous tumor data
from 268 patients, including multiple biopsies within each tumor.
On average, these patients were followed for 4.4 years, during which
time 37 developed cancerous tumors. Overall, the database used in
the study represents more than 32,000 distinct genotypes of different
cells within the tumors.
Using computational techniques to analyze the data, the researchers
calculated measures of diversity inside the tumors. Essentially,
they counted cell varieties and measured the genetic difference,
or divergence, between those varieties. “Simply put, we took
ecology measures of species diversity and translated them into measures
of cell diversity within tumors,” Maley says. The found a
striking correlation between increased diversity of tumor cells
and progression to cancer. For every additional cell variety detected
in a tumor, the patient was twice as likely to progress to cancer.
Maley suggests that genetically diverse tumors have a high probability
of generating mutant cells that will flourish and spread, allowing
the tumor to transform and grow. In the future, in addition to serving
as a biomarker for cancer risk, he adds, measures of genetic diversity
might help doctors assess the success of cancer prevention therapies.
In fact, he speculates, genetic diversity among tumor cells might
help explain why therapy sometimes fails. If a tumor contains a
diverse population of cells, some of those cells are more likely
to resist treatment, Maley says. Adapting to and surviving chemotherapy,
these resistant cells could breed, leading to a cancer relapse.
He hopes to pursue this hypothesis in the future. “More immediately,”
he adds, “we intend to validate the new study with other cohorts
and other types of tumors.”
Maley is lead author on the study, which was initiated when he was
a staff scientist at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle,
prior to his arrival at Wistar. The additional coauthors are Patricia
C. Galipeau, Xiaohong Li, Carissa A. Sanchez, Thomas G. Paulson,
Patricia L. Blount, Peter S. Rabinovitch and Brian J. Reid, all
at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, and Jennifer C. Finley,
V. Jon Wongsurawat, and Rosa-Ana Risques at the University of Washington.
Blount, Rabinovitch, and Reid also have appointments at the University
of Washington.
Support for the research was provided by the National Institutes
of Health and the Commonwealth Universal Research Enhancement Program
of the Pennsylvania Department of Health. Support for Maley’s
ongoing research is also being provided by the McLean Contributionship.
The Wistar Institute is an independent nonprofit biomedical research
institution dedicated to discovering the causes and cures for major
diseases, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders,
and infectious diseases, including AIDS and influenza. Founded in
1892 as the first institution of its kind in the nation, The Wistar
Institute today is a National Cancer Institute-designated Cancer
Center focused on basic and translational research. Discoveries
at Wistar have led to the creation of vaccines for such diseases
as rabies, rubella, and rotavirus; significant insights into the
mechanisms of skin, brain, breast, lung, and prostate cancers; and
the development of monoclonal antibodies and other significant research
technologies and tools. News releases from The Wistar Institute
are available to reporters by direct e-mail upon request.
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