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Study unveils molecular pathways followed by metastatic cancer cells

3 Feb 2023
Study unveils molecular pathways followed by metastatic cancer cells

Metastasis, the process by which cancer cells leave the primary tumour and spread to other tissues to seed new cancerous growth, causes most cancer deaths.

There is a clear need to better understand the processes that enable cancer cells to branch off, survive in a different environment and form another tumour, as new insights may illuminate novel treatment strategies.

In a new study published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine, a team of scientists at Baylor College of Medicine took a closer look at the molecular pathways metastatic cancer cells use and identified four cancer subtypes according to the main genes expressed.

The findings unveiled potential vulnerabilities of each subtype that have relevant implications for therapy.

“We analysed molecular data from the public domain collectively representing 38 studies and more than 3,000 patients and 4,000 tumours,” said lead author Dr Chad Creighton, professor of medicine and co-director of cancer bioinformatics at the Dan L Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center at Baylor.

“Our pan-cancer analysis looked to identify molecular pathways that are common to many different cancers, regardless of tumour origin.”

One challenge when studying cancer metastasis is that tumour samples have abundant non-cancer tissue.

Samples tend to be a mixture of cancer and non-cancer cells, such as normal endothelial cells, fibroblasts and immune cells, that interfere with the molecular analysis of cancer cells.

To cut through all that noise, Creighton and his colleagues worked with data obtained from PDX cancer models.

In this model, human cancer tissues implanted in immune deficient mouse models grew into a new tumour similar to a metastasis.

“The nice thing with the PDX model is that mouse cells are different enough that they cannot be confused with human cells and, therefore, they are not going to contribute to the cancer profile,” Creighton said.

By analysing the data of the PDX models, the team was able to define four cancer molecular subtypes in the metastasis-like PDX samples.

Importantly, the researchers determined that those four subtypes also are present in patient metastasis and are broadly represented among the different cancer types studied.

These subtypes not only facilitate understanding the molecular underpinnings of metastases but also point at potential therapeutic interventions already under investigation.

The tumours in the first subtype have extensive alterations in gene copy number, higher expression of both DNA repair genes and transcription factor genes such as MYC.

This suggests that tumours of this subtype might be susceptible to MYC-inhibiting compounds or BET inhibitors currently under clinical evaluation.

The second subtype has higher expression of genes involving metabolism, prostaglandin synthesis and regulation.

Tumours in this group might be susceptible to COX-2 inhibitors.

The third subtype has evidence of neuronal differentiation and high expression of genes EZH2and BCL2.

In this case, such tumours might respond better to EZH2 or BCL2 inhibitors.

The fourth subtype has higher expression of immune checkpoint and Notch pathway genes, suggesting that these tumours could be affected by immunotherapy.

“When comparing a primary tumour with the metastatic tumour derived from it, we found that, in most cases, the primary and the metastatic tumours were not of the same subtype,” Creighton said. “This has important implications for therapy as it suggests that primary and metastatic tumours may not be treated in the same way. The findings provide valuable insights for the development of personalised treatments for metastatic cancer.”

Article: Pan-cancer molecular subtypes of metastasis reveal distinct and evolving transcriptional programs

Source: Baylor College of Medicine