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Phenotypic and genomic analysis of multiple myeloma minimal residual disease tumor cells: a new model to understand chemoresistance
Author(s) -
Bruno Paiva,
Luís A. Corchete,
MaríaBelén Vidriales,
Noemí Puig,
Patricia Maiso,
Idoia Rodríguez,
Diego Alignani,
Leire Burgos,
María-Luz Sánchez,
Paloma Bárcena,
M Asuncion Echeveste,
MiguelTeodoro Hernández,
Ramón GarcíaSánz,
Enrique M. Ocio,
Albert Oriol,
Mercedes Gironella,
Luis Palomera,
Felipe de Arriba,
Yolanda Campos,
Sadie Johnson,
Joshua Epstein,
Bart Barlogie,
Juan José Lahuerta,
Joan Bladé,
Alberto Órfão,
MaríaVictoria Mateos,
Jesús F. San Miguel
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood-2015-08-665679
Subject(s) - minimal residual disease , phenotype , multiple myeloma , biology , somatic evolution in cancer , clonal selection , cancer research , genetics , gene , immunology , leukemia
Persistence of chemoresistant minimal residual disease (MRD) plasma cells (PCs) is associated with inferior survival in multiple myeloma (MM). Thus, characterization of the minor MRD subclone may represent a unique model to understand chemoresistance, but to our knowledge, the phenotypic and genetic features of the MRD subclone have never been investigated. Here, we compared the antigenic profile of MRD vs diagnostic clonal PCs in 40 elderly MM patients enrolled in the GEM2010MAS65 study and showed that the MRD subclone is enriched in cells overexpressing integrins (CD11a/CD11c/CD29/CD49d/CD49e), chemokine receptors (CXCR4), and adhesion molecules (CD44/CD54). Genetic profiling of MRD vs diagnostic PCs was performed in 12 patients; 3 of them showed identical copy number alterations (CNAs), in another 3 cases, MRD clonal PCs displayed all genetic alterations detected at diagnosis plus additional CNAs that emerged at the MRD stage, whereas in the remaining 6 patients, there were CNAs present at diagnosis that were undetectable in MRD clonal PCs, but also a selected number of genetic alterations that became apparent only at the MRD stage. The MRD subclone showed significant downregulation of genes related to protein processing in endoplasmic reticulum, as well as novel deregulated genes such as ALCAM that is prognostically relevant in MM and may identify chemoresistant PCs in vitro. Altogether, our results suggest that therapy-induced clonal selection could be already present at the MRD stage, where chemoresistant PCs show a singular phenotypic signature that may result from the persistence of clones with different genetic and gene expression profiles. This trial was registered atwww.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01237249.

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