TY - JOUR
T1 - A Direct Test of Selection in Cell Populations Using the Diversity in Gene Expression within Tumors
AU - Li, Chunyan
AU - Hou, Yali
AU - Xu, Jin
AU - Zhang, Aiqun
AU - Liu, Zhenzhen
AU - Qi, Furong
AU - Yang, Zuyu
AU - Chen, Ke
AU - Liu, Sixue
AU - Huang, Huanwei
AU - Wang, Qianfei
AU - Dong, Jiahong
AU - Wu, Chung I.
AU - Lu, Xuemei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/7/1
Y1 - 2017/7/1
N2 - Although intratumor diversity driven by selection has been the prevailing view in cancer biology, recent population genetic analyses have been unable to reject the neutral interpretation. As the power to reject neutrality in tumors is often low, it will be desirable to have an alternative means to test selection directly. Here, we utilize gene expression data as a surrogate for functional significance in intra- and intertumor comparisons. The expression divergence between samples known to be driven by selection (e.g., between tumor and normal tissues) is always higher than the divergence between normal samples, which should be close to the neutral level of divergence. In contrast, the expression differentiation between regions of the same tumor, being lower than the neutral divergence, is incompatible with the hypothesis of selectively driven divergence. To further test the hypothesis of neutral evolution, we select a hepatocellular carcinoma tumor that has large intratumor SNV and CNV (single nucleotide variation and copy number variation, respectively) diversity. This tumor enables us to calibrate the level of expression divergence against that of genetic divergence. We observe that intratumor divergence in gene expression profile lags far behind genetic divergence, indicating insufficient phenotypic differences for selection to operate. All these expression analyses corroborate that natural selection does not operate effectively within tumors, supporting recent interpretations of within-tumor diversity. As the expected level of genetic diversity, hence the potential for drug resistance, would be much higher under neutrality than under selection, the issue is of both theoretical and clinical significance.
AB - Although intratumor diversity driven by selection has been the prevailing view in cancer biology, recent population genetic analyses have been unable to reject the neutral interpretation. As the power to reject neutrality in tumors is often low, it will be desirable to have an alternative means to test selection directly. Here, we utilize gene expression data as a surrogate for functional significance in intra- and intertumor comparisons. The expression divergence between samples known to be driven by selection (e.g., between tumor and normal tissues) is always higher than the divergence between normal samples, which should be close to the neutral level of divergence. In contrast, the expression differentiation between regions of the same tumor, being lower than the neutral divergence, is incompatible with the hypothesis of selectively driven divergence. To further test the hypothesis of neutral evolution, we select a hepatocellular carcinoma tumor that has large intratumor SNV and CNV (single nucleotide variation and copy number variation, respectively) diversity. This tumor enables us to calibrate the level of expression divergence against that of genetic divergence. We observe that intratumor divergence in gene expression profile lags far behind genetic divergence, indicating insufficient phenotypic differences for selection to operate. All these expression analyses corroborate that natural selection does not operate effectively within tumors, supporting recent interpretations of within-tumor diversity. As the expected level of genetic diversity, hence the potential for drug resistance, would be much higher under neutrality than under selection, the issue is of both theoretical and clinical significance.
KW - genetic diversity
KW - intra- and intertumor heterogeneity
KW - selection
KW - variation in gene expression
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85032504387
U2 - 10.1093/MOLBEV/MSX115
DO - 10.1093/MOLBEV/MSX115
M3 - 文章
C2 - 28369576
AN - SCOPUS:85032504387
SN - 0737-4038
VL - 34
SP - 1730
EP - 1742
JO - Molecular Biology and Evolution
JF - Molecular Biology and Evolution
IS - 7
ER -