The research is published July 20 in the journal Cell.
"Now we have a very accurate picture of how acute leukemia develops,"
says senior author Richard K. Wilson, PhD, director of The Genome
Institute at Washington University. "It's not hundreds of mutations that
are important but only a few in each patient that push a normal cell to
become a cancer cell. Finding these mutations will be important for
identifying targeted therapies that can knock down a patient's cancer."
The study is the first to investigate how often mutations typically
develop in healthy stem cells in the blood. These immature cells in the
bone marrow give rise to all the blood cells in the body.
AML is a blood cancer that develops when too many immature blood
cells crowd out the healthy cells. In recent years, Washington
University researchers at the Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish
Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine have sequenced the
genomes of 200 patients with AML to try to understand the mutations at
the root of the disease.
Without fail, each patient's leukemia cells held hundreds of
mutations, posing a conundrum for scientists, who have long believed
that all the mutations in a cancer cell are likely to be important for
the disease to progress.
"But we knew all of these mutations couldn't be important," says
co-first author Daniel Link, MD, professor of medicine. "It didn't make
any sense to us that so many mutations were present in all the cells in
the tumor."
To investigate the origin of these mutations, the researchers
isolated blood stem cells from healthy people of different ages. The
youngest were newborns, and the oldest was in his 70s.
Every person has about 10,000 blood stem cells in their bone marrow,
and the researchers found that each stem cell acquires about 10
mutations over the course of a year. By age 50, a person has accumulated
nearly 500 mutations in every blood stem cell.
"Mutations are known to develop in cells as we age, but no one had
any idea how many mutations occur in blood stem cells and how frequently
they develop," Link says. "These random, background mutations occur
during cell division and are unrelated to cancer. Our DNA can tolerate a
huge number of these hits without any negative consequences. But if a
cancer-initiating event occurs in one of these stem cells, it captures
the genetic history of that cell, including the earlier mutations, and
drives leukemia to develop."
As part of the study, the researchers sequenced the genomes of 24
patients with AML and compared the mutations in their leukemia cells to
those that occurred in the blood stem cells of the healthy individuals.
The scientists were surprised to see that the total number of mutations
varied by age, not by whether a patient had leukemia. Thus, a healthy
person in his 40s had just about the same number of mutations in his
blood stem cells as a leukemia patient of the same age had in his cancer
cells.
The study's results help to explain why leukemia occurs more frequently as people age.
"AML is relatively uncommon until about age 60," says co-first author
John Welch, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine. "It is the
persistent, random accumulation of mutations in blood stem cells that
contributes to the risk of the disease."
By sequencing the genomes of the AML patients, the researchers also
were able to identify 13 novel "driver" mutations that are likely to be
important for leukemia to develop in other patients. They also
identified a number of additional cooperating mutations that work
together with the driver mutations to give blood stem cells a growth
advantage over other cells. In many patients, it appeared that in
addition to an initiating driver mutation, only a one or two additional
cooperating mutations were important for cancer to occur.
While the findings are important to leukemia, they may also hold true for other cancers.
"Our study does not provide proof that this model applies to other
cancers," says corresponding author Timothy Ley, MD, professor of
medicine and of genetics. "But this research suggests that scientists
should look. This model could explain the large numbers of mutations we
and other researchers are finding in breast, lung and other cancers. The
idea that the vast majority of mutations occur in a cell before it
becomes cancer is completely novel and should be explored further."
The research is supported by the National Human Genome Research
Institute (NHGRI U54 HG003079), the National Cancer Institute (P01
CA101937 and K99 HL103975) and the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation.
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