Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?

Abstract Background Foulds defined, “Tumor progression (as a) permanent, irreversible qualitative change in one or more of its characters” (Cancer Res. 1954). Accordingly progressions, such as metastases and acquired drug-resistance, were since found to be subspecies of cancers with conserved and nu...

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Main Authors: Mathew Bloomfield, Peter Duesberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-01-01
Series:Molecular Cytogenetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13039-017-0350-4
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spelling doaj-c5485aec5a704c92a6634b05b4f2df1d2020-11-25T01:42:57ZengBMCMolecular Cytogenetics1755-81662018-01-0111111610.1186/s13039-017-0350-4Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?Mathew Bloomfield0Peter Duesberg1Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Donner Laboratory, University of California at BerkeleyDepartment of Molecular and Cell Biology, Donner Laboratory, University of California at BerkeleyAbstract Background Foulds defined, “Tumor progression (as a) permanent, irreversible qualitative change in one or more of its characters” (Cancer Res. 1954). Accordingly progressions, such as metastases and acquired drug-resistance, were since found to be subspecies of cancers with conserved and numerous new chromosomes. Here we ask whether cancers acquire numerous new chromosomes gradually or simultaneously in progressions. The currently prevailing theory of Nowell (Science, 1976) holds that unexplained “genetic instability” generates “variant sublines (with) changes in chromosome number” and that “clonal” progressions arise by “stepwise selection of more aggressive sublines”. The literature, however, contains many examples of “immediate” selections of progressions with numerous new chromosomes - notably experimentally initiated fusions between cancers and heterologous cells. Furthermore, the stepwise progression theory predicts intermediate sublines of cancers with multiple non-clonal additions of new chromosomes. However, the literature does not describe such intermediates. Results In view of these inconsistencies with stepwise progression we test here a saltational theory, in which the inherent variability of cancer-specific aneuploidy generates “immediate” progressions with individual clonal karyotypes, transcriptomes and phenotypes in single steps. Using cell fusion as an established controllable model of “immediate” progression, we generated seven immortal murine hybridomas by fusing immortal murine myeloma cells and normal antibody-producing B-cells with polyethylene glycol within a few minutes. These immortal hybridomas contained individual sets of 71 to 105 clonal chromosomes, compared to the 52 chromosomes of the parental myeloma. Thus the myeloma had gained 19 to 53 new clonal chromosomes in seven individual hybridomas in a single step. Furthermore, no stable intermediates were found, as would be predicted by a saltational process. Conclusions We conclude that random fusions between myelomas and normal B-cells generate clonal hybridomas with multiple, individual chromosomes in single steps. Similar single-step mechanisms may also generate the “late” clonal progressions of cancers with gains of numerous new chromosomes and thus explain the absence of intermediates. Latency would reflect the low probability of rare stochastic progressions. In conclusion, the karyotypic clonality of hybridomas and spontaneous progressions suggests karyotypic alterations as proximate causes of neoplastic progressions. Since cancer-specific aneuploidy catalyzes karyotypic variation, the degree of aneuploidy predicts the clinical risk of neoplastic progression, confirming classical predictions based on DNA content.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13039-017-0350-4Saltational progressionMetastasisCancer drug-resistanceCell fusionHybridomaAneuploidy-catalyzed karyotype variation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mathew Bloomfield
Peter Duesberg
spellingShingle Mathew Bloomfield
Peter Duesberg
Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
Molecular Cytogenetics
Saltational progression
Metastasis
Cancer drug-resistance
Cell fusion
Hybridoma
Aneuploidy-catalyzed karyotype variation
author_facet Mathew Bloomfield
Peter Duesberg
author_sort Mathew Bloomfield
title Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
title_short Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
title_full Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
title_fullStr Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
title_full_unstemmed Is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
title_sort is cancer progression caused by gradual or simultaneous acquisitions of new chromosomes?
publisher BMC
series Molecular Cytogenetics
issn 1755-8166
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Background Foulds defined, “Tumor progression (as a) permanent, irreversible qualitative change in one or more of its characters” (Cancer Res. 1954). Accordingly progressions, such as metastases and acquired drug-resistance, were since found to be subspecies of cancers with conserved and numerous new chromosomes. Here we ask whether cancers acquire numerous new chromosomes gradually or simultaneously in progressions. The currently prevailing theory of Nowell (Science, 1976) holds that unexplained “genetic instability” generates “variant sublines (with) changes in chromosome number” and that “clonal” progressions arise by “stepwise selection of more aggressive sublines”. The literature, however, contains many examples of “immediate” selections of progressions with numerous new chromosomes - notably experimentally initiated fusions between cancers and heterologous cells. Furthermore, the stepwise progression theory predicts intermediate sublines of cancers with multiple non-clonal additions of new chromosomes. However, the literature does not describe such intermediates. Results In view of these inconsistencies with stepwise progression we test here a saltational theory, in which the inherent variability of cancer-specific aneuploidy generates “immediate” progressions with individual clonal karyotypes, transcriptomes and phenotypes in single steps. Using cell fusion as an established controllable model of “immediate” progression, we generated seven immortal murine hybridomas by fusing immortal murine myeloma cells and normal antibody-producing B-cells with polyethylene glycol within a few minutes. These immortal hybridomas contained individual sets of 71 to 105 clonal chromosomes, compared to the 52 chromosomes of the parental myeloma. Thus the myeloma had gained 19 to 53 new clonal chromosomes in seven individual hybridomas in a single step. Furthermore, no stable intermediates were found, as would be predicted by a saltational process. Conclusions We conclude that random fusions between myelomas and normal B-cells generate clonal hybridomas with multiple, individual chromosomes in single steps. Similar single-step mechanisms may also generate the “late” clonal progressions of cancers with gains of numerous new chromosomes and thus explain the absence of intermediates. Latency would reflect the low probability of rare stochastic progressions. In conclusion, the karyotypic clonality of hybridomas and spontaneous progressions suggests karyotypic alterations as proximate causes of neoplastic progressions. Since cancer-specific aneuploidy catalyzes karyotypic variation, the degree of aneuploidy predicts the clinical risk of neoplastic progression, confirming classical predictions based on DNA content.
topic Saltational progression
Metastasis
Cancer drug-resistance
Cell fusion
Hybridoma
Aneuploidy-catalyzed karyotype variation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13039-017-0350-4
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