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Data from Multiomic Analysis of Subtype Evolution and Heterogeneity in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma

Posted on 2023-03-31 - 03:48
Abstract

Multiple studies have identified transcriptome subtypes of high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC), but their interpretation and translation are complicated by tumor evolution and polyclonality accompanied by extensive accumulation of somatic aberrations, varying cell type admixtures, and different tissues of origin. In this study, we examined the chronology of HGSOC subtype evolution in the context of these factors using a novel integrative analysis of absolute copy-number analysis and gene expression in The Cancer Genome Atlas complemented by single-cell analysis of six independent tumors. Tumor purity, ploidy, and subclonality were reliably inferred from different genomic platforms, and these characteristics displayed marked differences between subtypes. Genomic lesions associated with HGSOC subtypes tended to be subclonal, implying subtype divergence at later stages of tumor evolution. Subclonality of recurrent HGSOC alterations was evident for proliferative tumors, characterized by extreme genomic instability, absence of immune infiltration, and greater patient age. In contrast, differentiated tumors were characterized by largely intact genome integrity, high immune infiltration, and younger patient age. Single-cell sequencing of 42,000 tumor cells revealed widespread heterogeneity in tumor cell type composition that drove bulk subtypes but demonstrated a lack of intrinsic subtypes among tumor epithelial cells. Our findings prompt the dismissal of discrete transcriptome subtypes for HGSOC and replacement by a more realistic model of continuous tumor development that includes mixtures of subclones, accumulation of somatic aberrations, infiltration of immune and stromal cells in proportions correlated with tumor stage and tissue of origin, and evolution between properties previously associated with discrete subtypes.

Significance:

This study infers whether transcriptome-based groupings of tumors differentiate early in carcinogenesis and are, therefore, appropriate targets for therapy and demonstrates that this is not the case for HGSOC.

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FUNDING

German Research Foundation

Jan Chorzempa Cancer Research Endowed Fund

Masonic Cancer Center's Translational Working Group

University of MN Grand Challenges

American Cancer Society CSDG

NIH

NCI

CTSI NCATS

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Cancer Research

AUTHORS (21)

  • Ludwig Geistlinger
    Sehyun Oh
    Marcel Ramos
    Lucas Schiffer
    Rebecca S. LaRue
    Christine M. Henzler
    Sarah A. Munro
    Claire Daughters
    Andrew C. Nelson
    Boris J. Winterhoff
    Zenas Chang
    Shobhana Talukdar
    Mihir Shetty
    Sally A. Mullany
    Martin Morgan
    Giovanni Parmigiani
    Michael J. Birrer
    Li-Xuan Qin
    Markus Riester
    Timothy K. Starr
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