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Ongoing genome doubling shapes evolvability and immunity in ovarian cancer

Authors

  • Andrew McPherson
  • Ignacio Vázquez-García
  • Matthew A. Myers
  • Duaa H. Al-Rawi
  • Matthew Zatzman
  • Adam C. Weiner
  • Samuel Freeman
  • Neeman Mohibullah
  • Gryte Satas
  • Marc J. Williams
  • Nicholas Ceglia
  • Danguolė Norkūnaitė
  • Allen W. Zhang
  • Jun Li
  • Jamie L.P. Lim
  • Michelle Wu
  • Seongmin Choi
  • Eliyahu Havasov
  • Diljot Grewal
  • Hongyu Shi
  • Minsoo Kim
  • Roland F. Schwarz
  • Tom Kaufmann
  • Khanh Ngoc Dinh
  • Florian Uhlitz
  • Julie Tran
  • Yushi Wu
  • Ruchi Patel
  • Satish Ramakrishnan
  • DooA Kim
  • Justin Clarke
  • Hunter Green
  • Emily Ali
  • Melody DiBona
  • Nancy Varice
  • Ritika Kundra
  • Vance Broach
  • Ginger J. Gardner
  • Kara Long Roche
  • Yukio Sonoda
  • Oliver Zivanovic
  • Sarah H. Kim
  • Rachel N. Grisham
  • Ying L Liu
  • Agnes Viale
  • Nicole Rusk
  • Yulia Lakhman
  • Lora H. Ellenson
  • Simon Tavaré
  • Samuel Aparicio
  • Dennis S. Chi
  • Carol Aghajanian
  • Nadeem R. Abu-Rustum
  • Claire F. Friedman
  • Dmitriy Zamarin
  • Britta Weigelt
  • Samuel F. Bakhoum
  • Sohrab P. Shah

Journal

  • Nature

Citation

  • Nature 644 (8078): 1078-1087

Abstract

  • Whole-genome doubling (WGD) is a common feature of human cancers and is linked to tumour progression, drug resistance, and metastasis1,2,3,4,5,6. Here we examine the impact of WGD on somatic evolution and immune evasion at single-cell resolution in patient tumours. Using single-cell whole-genome sequencing, we analysed 70 high-grade serous ovarian cancer samples from 41 patients (30,260 tumour genomes) and observed near-ubiquitous evidence that WGD is an ongoing mutational process. WGD was associated with increased cell–cell diversity and higher rates of chromosomal missegregation and consequent micronucleation. We developed a mutation-based WGD timing method called doubleTime to delineate specific modes by which WGD can drive tumour evolution, including early fixation followed by considerable diversification, multiple parallel WGD events on a pre-existing background of copy-number diversity, and evolutionarily late WGD in small clones and individual cells. Furthermore, using matched single-cell RNA sequencing and high-resolution immunofluorescence microscopy, we found that inflammatory signalling and cGAS-STING pathway activation result from ongoing chromosomal instability, but this is restricted to predominantly diploid tumours (WGD-low). By contrast, predominantly WGD tumours (WGD-high), despite increased missegregation, exhibited cell-cycle dysregulation, STING1 repression, and immunosuppressive phenotypic states. Together, these findings establish WGD as an ongoing mutational process that promotes evolvability and dysregulated immunity in high-grade serous ovarian cancer.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09240-3