MBI Videos

Christina Curtis

  • video photo
    Christina Curtis


    What happens in the early and still undetectable human malignancy is unknown because direct observations are impractical. Here I will describe a novel “Big Bang� model, whereby a tumor grows predominantly as a single expansion producing numerous intermixed sub-clones, which are not subject to stringent clonal selection. In this model, both public and most detectable private mutations arise during the earliest phase of tumor growth. Multi-scale genomic profiling of 349 individual glands sampled from 15 colorectal tumors revealed the absence of selective sweeps, uniformly high intra-tumor heterogeneity, and sub-clone mixing in distant tumor regions, as postulated by the Big Bang. By integrating the data in a spatial model of tumor growth and statistical inference framework we also verified the most striking prediction of our model, namely that most detectable intra-tumor heterogeneity originates from private alterations acquired early during growth, and not from the later expansion of selected sub-clones. Hence, early sub-clones define the genomic profile of colorectal carcinomas and advanced adenomas, whereas potentially dangerous late-arising sub-clones will go undetected. Moreover, our results suggest that sub-clone mixing may be a biomarker of malignant potential. This new model provides a quantitative framework that explains the origins of intra-tumor heterogeneity and tumor growth dynamics with significant clinical implications for treatment resistance and metastatic progression, as I will discuss.

View Videos By