Single-cell multi-omics identifies chronic inflammation as a driver of TP53-mutant leukemic evolution

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Abstract

Understanding the genetic and nongenetic determinants of tumor protein 53 (TP53)-mutation-driven clonal evolution and subsequent transformation is a crucial step toward the design of rational therapeutic strategies. Here we carry out allelic resolution single-cell multi-omic analysis of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs) from patients with a myeloproliferative neoplasm who transform to TP53-mutant secondary acute myeloid leukemia (sAML). All patients showed dominant TP53 ‘multihit’ HSPC clones at transformation, with a leukemia stem cell transcriptional signature strongly predictive of adverse outcomes in independent cohorts, across both TP53-mutant and wild-type (WT) AML. Through analysis of serial samples, antecedent TP53-heterozygous clones and in vivo perturbations, we demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized effect of chronic inflammation, which suppressed TP53 WT HSPCs while enhancing the fitness advantage of TP53-mutant cells and promoted genetic evolution. Our findings will facilitate the development of risk-stratification, early detection and treatment strategies for TP53-mutant leukemia, and are of broad relevance to other cancer types.

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Rodriguez-Meira, A., Norfo, R., Wen, S., Chédeville, A. L., Rahman, H., O’Sullivan, J., … Mead, A. J. (2023). Single-cell multi-omics identifies chronic inflammation as a driver of TP53-mutant leukemic evolution. Nature Genetics, 55(9), 1531–1541. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-023-01480-1

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