Mapping genomic and epigenomic evolution in cancer ecosystems

Author:

Ushijima Toshikazu1ORCID,Clark Susan J.23ORCID,Tan Patrick4567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Epigenomics, National Cancer Center Research Institute, Tokyo 104-0045, Japan.

2. Epigenetics Research Laboratory, Genomics and Epigenetics Theme, Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia.

3. St. Vincent’s Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia.

4. Cancer and Stem Cell Biology, Duke-NUS Medical School Singapore, Singapore 169857, Singapore.

5. Epigenomic and Epitranscriptomic Regulation, Genome Institute of Singapore, Singapore 138672, Singapore.

6. Cancer Science Institute of Singapore, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117599, Singapore.

7. Department of Physiology, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117597, Singapore.

Abstract

Cancer is a major cause of global mortality underpinned by genomic and epigenomic derangements. Here, we highlight the importance of multimodal data integration in understanding the molecular evolution of malignant cell states across the cancer life cycle. The widespread presence of driver mutations and epigenetic alterations in normal-appearing tissues is prompting a reassessment of how cancer initiation is defined. In later-stage cancers, studying the roles of clonal selection, epigenomic adaptation, and persister cells in metastasis and therapy resistance is an emerging field. Finally, the importance of tumor ecosystems in driving cancer development is being unraveled by single-cell and spatial technologies at unprecedented resolution. Improving cancer risk assessment and accelerating therapeutic discovery for patients will require robust, comprehensive, and integrated temporal, spatial, and multilevel tumor atlases across the cancer life cycle.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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