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Extrachromosomal DNA-driven oncogene spatial heterogeneity and evolution in glioblastoma.

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posted on 2025-10-10, 10:34 authored by Imran Noorani, Magnus Haughey, Jens Luebeck, Andrew Rowan, Eva Grönroos, Francesco Terenzi, Ivy Tsz-Lo Wong, Davide Pradella, Marta Lisi, Jeanette Kittel, Natasha Sharma, Chris Bailey, Clare E Weeden, Donald M Bell, Eric Joo, Vittorio Barbè, Matthew G Jones, King L Hung, Emma L Nye, Mary Green, Lucy Meader, Emma J Norton, Mark Fabian, Nnennaya Kanu, Mariam Jamal-Hanjani, Thomas Santarius, Andrea Ventura, James AR Nicoll, Delphine Boche, Howard Y Chang, Vineet Bafna, Weini Huang, Paul S Mischel, Charles Swanton, Benjamin Werner
UNLABELLED: Oncogenes amplified on extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) contribute to treatment resistance and poor survival across cancers. Currently, the spatiotemporal evolution of ecDNA remains poorly understood. In this study, we integrate computational modeling with samples from 94 treatment-naive human glioblastomas (GBM) to investigate the spatiotemporal evolution of ecDNA. We observe oncogene-specific patterns of ecDNA spatial heterogeneity, emerging from random ecDNA segregation and differing fitness advantages. Unlike PDGFRA-ecDNAs, EGFR-ecDNAs often accumulate prior to clonal expansions, conferring strong fitness advantages and reaching high abundances. In corroboration, we observe pretumor ecDNA accumulation in vivo in genetically engineered mouse neural stem cells. Variant and wild-type EGFR-ecDNAs often coexist in GBM. Those variant EGFR-ecDNAs, most commonly EGFRvIII-ecDNA, always derive from preexisting wild-type EGFR-ecDNAs, occur early, and reach high abundance. Our results suggest that the ecDNA oncogenic makeup determines unique evolutionary trajectories. New concepts such as ecDNA clonality and heteroplasmy require a refined evolutionary interpretation of genomic data in a large subset of GBMs. SIGNIFICANCE: We study spatial patterns of ecDNA-amplified oncogenes and their evolutionary properties in human GBM, revealing an ecDNA landscape and ecDNA oncogene-specific evolutionary histories. ecDNA accumulation can precede clonal expansion, facilitating the emergence of EGFR oncogenic variants, reframing our interpretation of genomic data in a large subset of GBMs. See related article by Korsah et al., p. XX.

Funding

NCI NIH HHS (Grant ID: R01 CA282913) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: CGCATF-2021/100012) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: CGCATF-2021/100025) National Cancer Institute (NCI) (Grant ID: OT2CA278688) National Cancer Institute (NCI) (Grant ID: OT2CA278635) National Cancer Institute (NCI) (Grant ID: R01-GM114362) Barts Charity (Grant ID: MGU045) UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) (Grant ID: MR/V02342X/1) HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council (ERC) (Grant ID: 835297) Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: FC001169) Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: FC001169) Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: FC001169) National Cancer Institute (NCI) (Grant ID: NIH K00CA274692) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: C11496/A17786) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: C416/A21999) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: C11496/A30025) Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research (NovoNordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research) (Grant ID: ID16584) Royal Society (The Royal Society) (Grant ID: RP/EA/180007) Mark Foundation For Cancer Research (The Mark Foundation for Cancer Research) (Grant ID: 21-029-ASP) National Cancer Institute (NCI) (Grant ID: U24-CA264379) National Cancer Institute (NCI) (Grant ID: NIH K99CA286968) NCI NIH HHS (Grant ID: P30 CA008748) Crick (Grant ID: CC1061, Grant title: STP Experimental Histopathology) Crick (Grant ID: CC1069, Grant title: STP Light Microscopy) Crick (Grant ID: CC2041, Grant title: Swanton CC2041) Novo Nordisk UK Research Foundation (Grant ID: NNF15OC0016584, Grant title: NovoNordisk Foundation 16584) European Research Council (Grant ID: 835297 - PROTEUS, Grant title: ERC 835297 - PROTEUS) Academy of Medical Sciences (Grant ID: SGL026\1035, Grant title: AMS SGL026\1035)

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