Differential Clonal Expansion in an Invading Cell Population: Clonal Advantage or Dumb Luck?

Cells Tissues Organs. 2017;203(2):105-113. doi: 10.1159/000452793. Epub 2017 Feb 20.

Abstract

In neoplastic cell growth, clones and subclones are variable both in size and mutational spectrum. The largest of these clones are believed to represent those cells with mutations that make them the most "fit," in a Darwinian sense, for expansion in their microenvironment. Thus, the degree of quantitative clonal expansion is regarded as being determined by innate qualitative differences between the cells that originate each clone. Here, using a combination of mathematical modelling and clonal labelling experiments applied to the developmental model system of the forming enteric nervous system, we describe how cells which are qualitatively identical may consistently produce clones of dramatically different sizes: most clones are very small while a few clones we term "superstars" contribute most of the cells to the final population. The basis of this is minor stochastic variations ("luck") in the timing and direction of movement and proliferation of individual cells, which builds a local advantage for daughter cells that is cumulative. This has potentially important consequences. In cancers, especially before strongly selective cytotoxic therapy, the assumption that the largest clones must be the cells with deterministic proliferative ability may not always hold true. In development, the gradual loss of clonal diversity as "superstars" take over the population may erode the resilience of the system to somatic mutations, which may have occurred early in clonal growth.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cell Proliferation
  • Clone Cells
  • Enteric Nervous System / pathology
  • Humans
  • Neoplasms / pathology*
  • Neural Crest / pathology
  • Stochastic Processes