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The ancient physician Hippocrates described the projection of blood vessels from a collection of cells as ‘karkinos’, the Greek word for crab. Today, we know this malignant growth as cancer. Although it remains one of our biggest killers, survival rates for several tumour types have improved dramatically in recent years. These Milestones celebrate two decades of breakthroughs in basic, translational and clinical research which have revolutionised our understanding and management of cancer.
Computational analysis of over 9,000 cancer genomes, coupled with functional validation in cell lines, highlights combinations of mutations required for tumor progression. This integrated approach provides a framework to stratify patients on the basis of interdependent genetic aberrations.
Biomarker analysis of the phase 3 JAVELIN Renal 101 trial uncovers molecular determinants of therapy-specific outcomes, which may inform personalized treatment strategies for patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma.
Technological advances have enabled the analysis of whole genomes, leading to the identification of causal factors that present new opportunities to prevent cancer. The authors of this Review discuss relevant findings in cancer genetics and genomics from the perspective of global cancer prevention and present a conceptual framework for the translation of such findings into clinical practice and evidence-based policies.
This Perspective discusses how therapeutic resistance is not only driven by genetic evolution but often involves non-genetic adaptive mechanisms that are intimately linked. Acknowledging these adaptive processes will enable the development of innovative strategies to monitor and counteract non-genetic therapy resistance as well as provide novel therapeutic avenues.
Melanoma cells undergo less oxidative stress and less ferroptosis in lymph than in blood, owing to higher levels of oleic acid in lymph, and thus exposure to the lymphatic environment increases subsequent metastasis through blood.
Siu and colleagues use a bespoke ctDNA assay and show predictive utility of longitudinal ctDNA analysis in a phase II clinical trial of patients receiving pembrolizumab that included multiple solid tumor types.
Both genetic and non-genetic factors underlie the intratumoural heterogeneity that fuels cancer evolution. This Review discusses the application of single-cell multi-omics technologies to the study of cancer evolution, which capture and integrate the different layers of heritable information and reveal their complex interplay.
Large-scale datasets of increasing size and complexity are being produced in the microbiome and oncology field. This Perspective discusses the potential to harness gut microbiome analysis, big data and machine learning in cancer, and the potential and limitations with this approach.
Preclinical evidence suggests that a fasting mimicking diet (FMD) can make cancer cells more vulnerable to chemotherapy, while protecting normal cells. In this randomized phase II clinical trial of 131 patients with HER2 negative early stage breast cancer, the authors demonstrate that FMD is safe and enhances the effects of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on radiological and pathological tumor response.
RAS proteins, which are frequently altered in cancer, were once considered undruggable, but compounds targeting some mutant RAS proteins have recently demonstrated clinical efficacy. In this Review, Malek and colleagues explore how these and other drugs that target RAS or associated pathways might be used effectively, particularly in combinations, and discuss other RAS-targeted therapies in the pipeline.
Genomic profiling of renal cell carcinoma has demonstrated the clinical relevance of several genetic alterations in different disease subtypes. Pal and colleagues discuss the prognostic and predictive value of these alterations, and how they might help to improve treatment selection and patient outcomes.
The onset of acquired resistance to treatment is virtually inevitable in patients with solid tumours. In this Review, the authors describe the role of tumour heterogeneity in the development of acquired resistance, potential treatment strategies that take into account the heterogeneity of patient's tumours, and how a better understanding of tumour heterogeneity might improve the outcomes of patients.
This Perspective discusses how therapeutic resistance is not only driven by genetic evolution but often involves non-genetic adaptive mechanisms that are intimately linked. Acknowledging these adaptive processes will enable the development of innovative strategies to monitor and counteract non-genetic therapy resistance as well as provide novel therapeutic avenues.
One of two papers linking oncogene-induced senescence and the DNA damage response. Activated oncogenes can cause aberrant DNA replication and thereby DNA damage, which leads to cellular senescence. This response can block tumour progression, but is often disabled by further alterations.
In mice with Eµ-myc transgenic lymphomas in which therapy-induced senescence (TIS) depends on the H3K9 histone methyltransferase Suv39h1, TIS-competent lymphomas but not TIS-incompetent Suv39h1– lymphomas show increased glucose utilization and ATP production after senescence-inducing chemotherapy to cope with proteotoxic stress elicited by factors of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP); senescent cancers are selectively vulnerable to drugs that block glucose utilization or autophagy.
When senescent cells accumulate during adulthood they negatively influence lifespan and promote age-dependent changes in several organs; clearance of these cells delayed tumorigenesis in mice and attenuated age-related deterioration of several organs without overt side effects, suggesting that the therapeutic removal of senescent cells may be able to extend healthy lifespan.
Normal mammary epithelial cells require attachment to the extracellular matrix (ECM) for survival, but in breast cancers tumour cells acquire the ability to survive outside their natural ECM niches. Here it is found that cell detachment induces metabolic defects which can be rescued by both the expression of the oncogene ERBB2 and — unexpectedly — by antioxidants, which, in this context, help promote cancer cell survival and proliferation.
Jason Locasale, Lewis Cantley, Matthew Vander Heiden and colleagues show that PHGDH is amplified in some human cancers and diverts a relatively large amount of glycolytic carbon into serine and glycine biosynthesis. They further show that PHGDH-amplified cancer cells become dependent on PHGDH for their growth, suggesting that the altered metabolic flux driven by this amplification contributes to oncogenesis.
Advances in next generation sequencing have made it possible to precisely characterize the coding mutations that occur during the development and progression of individual cancers. Here, this technique is used to sequence the genomes and transcriptomes of an oestrogen-receptor-α-positive metastatic lobular breast cancer; significant evolution is found to occur with disease progression.
Tobacco smoke contains more than sixty carcinogens that bind and mutate DNA. Here, massively parallel sequencing technology is used to sequence a small-cell lung cancer cell line, exploring the mutational burden associated with tobacco smoking. Multiple mutation signatures from the cocktail of carcinogens in tobacco smoke are found, as well as evidence of transcription-coupled repair and another, more general, expression-linked repair pathway.
Here, the genomes of a malignant melanoma and a lymphoblastoid cell line from the same person are sequenced, providing the first comprehensive catalogue of somatic mutations from an individual cancer. The data provide insight into the causes of tumour formation and the development of the cancer genome, with the dominant mutational signature reflecting DNA damage due to ultraviolet light exposure.
The flagship paper of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes Consortium describes the generation of the integrative analyses of 2,658 cancer whole genomes and their matching normal tissues across 38 tumour types, the structures for international data sharing and standardized analyses, and the main scientific findings from across the consortium studies.
The ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes Consortium
Large-scale genomic analysis of somatic point mutations in exomes from tumour–normal pairs across 21 cancer types identifies most known cancer genes in these tumour types as well as 33 genes not known to be significantly mutated, and down-sampling analysis indicates that larger sample sizes will reveal many more genes mutated at clinically important frequencies.
The characterization of 4,645 whole-genome and 19,184 exome sequences, covering most types of cancer, identifies 81 single-base substitution, doublet-base substitution and small-insertion-and-deletion mutational signatures, providing a systematic overview of the mutational processes that contribute to cancer development.
MSK-IMPACT is a clinical sequencing platform able to detect genomic mutations, copy number alterations and structural variants in a panel of cancer-related genes. This assay is implemented prospectively to inform patient enrollment in genomically matched clinical trials at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC). Sequencing results of tumor and matched normal tissue from a cohort of >10,000 patients with detailed clinical annotation provide an overview of the genomic landscape of advanced solid cancers and bring new insights into molecularly guided cancer therapy.
Crystal Mackall and colleagues report that antigen-independent signaling of chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) causes T cell exhaustion and reduced therapeutic efficacy of CAR T cells that can be overcome by incorporating the 4-1BB costimulatory domain into the CAR.
Adrienne Flanagan and colleagues identify distinct driver mutations in H3F3A and H3F3B in chondroblastoma and giant cell tumor of bone. The mutations occur in over 90% of tumors and exhibit a high degree of tumor type specificity.
Although mutant H3K27M histones inhibit PRC2 in diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas, these tumors exhibit significant amounts of PRC2 activity. The repression of several genes, including INK4A, by residual EZH2 activity is required for tumor growth, and EZH2 inhibitors therefore represent potential therapies for these patients.
Recent studies have identified a number of oncogenic histone point mutations in different cancers. Here the authors provide evidence that H3.3 G34R substitution mutation, which is found in paediatric gliomas, causes changes in H3K9me3 and H3K36me3 by interfering with the KDM4 family of K9/K36 demethylases.
The characterization of missense histone mutations that occur across several cancer types provides insight into the potential role of these mutations in altering chromatin structure and potentially contributing to tumour development.
Massively parallel DNA sequencing allows entire genomes to be screened for genetic changes associated with tumour progression. Here, the genomes of four DNA samples from a 44-year-old African-American patient with basal-like breast cancer were analysed. The samples came from peripheral blood, the primary tumour, a brain metastasis and a xenograft derived from the primary tumour. The findings indicate that cells with a distinct subset of the primary tumour mutation might be selected during metastasis and xenografting.
Analysing single cells from human B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemias, this study maps the genetic heterogeneity of cells within a given tumour sample, the evolutionary path by which different subclones have emerged, and ongoing dynamic changes associated with relapse. Leukaemia-propagating cells that transplant the disease mirror the genetic variegation of the bulk tumours, providing insights into the heterogeneity of these functional subpopulations at the genetic level. This has implications for therapeutic approaches targeting the tumours and specifically leukaemia-propagating cells.
Although it is known that tumours are genetically heterogeneous it has so far been difficult to dissect this heterogeneity at a single cell level. This paper combines whole-genome amplification and next-generation sequencing of flow-sorted nuclei from breast tumours to investigate their population structure and evolution. In contrast to gradual models of tumour progression, the results indicate that tumours grow by punctuated clonal expansions with few persistent intermediates.
Analysing human B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemias, this study maps the genetic heterogeneity of cells within a given tumour sample and the evolutionary path by which different subclones have emerged. Leukaemia-initiating cells that transplant the disease mirror the genetic variegation of the bulk tumours, providing insights into the heterogeneity of these functional subpopulations at the genetic level. This has implications for therapeutic approaches targeting the tumours and specifically leukaemia-initiating cells.
Intracellular antibodies can inhibit disease-relevant protein interactions, but inefficient cellular uptake limits their utility. Using a RAS-targeting intracellular antibody as a screening tool, the authors here identify small molecules that inhibit RAS-effector interactions and readily penetrate cells.
Treatment of KRASG12C-mutant cancer cells with the KRAS(G12C) inhibitor AMG 510 leads to durable response in mice, and anti-tumour activity in patients suggests that AMG 510 could be effective in patients for whom treatments are currently lacking.
The human microbiota influences a whole range of physiological functions. In this Review, Roy and Trinchieri discuss our current understanding of how the gut microbiota modulates responses to cancer therapy as well as mediating susceptibility to toxic side effects.
In this Viewpoint article, we asked four scientists working on the cancer microbiome to provide their opinions on the current state of the field, where the research is heading and the challenges of implementing this field for clinical utility.
A convolutional neural network model using feature extraction and machine-learning techniques provides a tool for classification of lung cancer histopathology images and predicting mutational status of driver oncogenes
Two papers by Kather and colleagues and Gerstung and colleagues develop workflows to predict a wide range of molecular alterations from pan-cancer digital pathology slides.
Two papers by Kather and colleagues and Gerstung and colleagues develop workflows to predict a wide range of molecular alterations from pan-cancer digital pathology slides.
A prospective, multicenter, case–control clinical trial evaluates the potential of artificial intelligence for providing accurate bedside diagnosis of patients with brain tumors.
An artificial intelligence-powered microscope able to detect tumor cells in histopathology slides holds promise for accelerating pathology workflows for cancer diagnosis
The CONSORT-AI and SPIRIT-AI extensions improve the transparency of clinical trial design and trial protocol reporting for artificial intelligence interventions.