Divergent Evolution of Malignant Subclones Maintains a Balance between Induced Aggressiveness and Intrinsic Drug Resistance in T-cell Cancer

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Abstract

Evolution and outgrowth of drug-resistant cancer cells are common causes of treatment failure. Patients with leukemic cutaneous T-cell lymphoma have a poor prognosis because of the development of drug resistance and severe bacterial infections. In this study, we show that most patients with leukemic cutaneous T-cell lymphoma harbor multiple genetically distinct subclones that express an identical clonal antigen receptor but display distinct phenotypes and functional properties. These coexisting malignant subclones exhibit differences in tissue homing, metabolism, and cytokine expression and respond differently to extrinsic factors like Staphylococcus aureus and cancer drugs. Indeed, although S. aureus toxins selectively enhance activation and proliferation of certain subclones, these responsive subclones are also the most intrinsically sensitive to cancer drugs when the stimuli are removed. Consequently, although the divergent evolution of malignant subclones drives aggressiveness, adaptability, and drug resistance by removing extrinsic stimuli and mapping malignant subclones, we can expose inherent vulnerabilities that can be exploited in the treatment of these cancers.

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APA

Buus, T. B., Vadivel, C. K., Gluud, M., Namini, M. R. J., Zeng, Z., Hedebo, S., … Ødum, N. (2025). Divergent Evolution of Malignant Subclones Maintains a Balance between Induced Aggressiveness and Intrinsic Drug Resistance in T-cell Cancer. Cancer Discovery, 15(10), 2036–2053. https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.CD-24-1856

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