Oncogenic context shapes the fitness landscape of tumor suppression. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Tumors acquire alterations in oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes in an adaptive walk through the fitness landscape of tumorigenesis. However, the interactions between oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes that shape this landscape remain poorly resolved and cannot be revealed by human cancer genomics alone. Here, we use a multiplexed, autochthonous mouse platform to model and quantify the initiation and growth of more than one hundred genotypes of lung tumors across four oncogenic contexts: KRAS G12D, KRAS G12C, BRAF V600E, and EGFR L858R. We show that the fitness landscape is rugged-the effect of tumor suppressor inactivation often switches between beneficial and deleterious depending on the oncogenic context-and shows no evidence of diminishing-returns epistasis within variants of the same oncogene. These findings argue against a simple linear signaling relationship amongst these three oncogenes and imply a critical role for off-axis signaling in determining the fitness effects of inactivating tumor suppressors.

publication date

  • October 12, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Lung Neoplasms
  • Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC10570323

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/s41467-023-42156-y

PubMed ID

  • 37828026

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 14

issue

  • 1