DiffInvex reveals how cancers rewire driver genes to beat chemotherapy
2025-05-13
(Press-News.org)
Barcelona, 13 May 2025 – Just as species adapt over generations, our body’s cells accumulate DNA changes throughout life. Most are harmless, yet a few “driver” mutations give a cell a competitive edge and can spark cancer. Chemotherapy then adds a new evolutionary pressure, encouraging further genetic changes that let tumours bounce back.
Researchers at IRB Barcelona have developed DiffInvex, a computational framework that tracks how evolutionary pressures on genes change as healthy cells become tumours and as tumours face chemotherapy. Applied to more than 11,000 human cancer and healthy tissue genomes spanning ~30 tissue types, DiffInvex pinpoints the mutational “escape routes” cancers take to resist treatment and reveals which genes may ignite resistance. The findings of this research are published today in Nature Communications.
Chemotherapy remains a cornerstone of cancer therapy, yet many tumours eventually relapse. Deciphering which mutations help cells survive treatment is notoriously difficult because chemotherapy itself causes new DNA damage and patients often receive a cocktail of drugs. “We needed a way to see through that noise and catch evolution in the act,” says senior author Dr. Fran Supek, group leader at IRB Barcelona and professor at the Biotech Research & Innovation Centre (BRIC), University of Copenhagen.
A data-driven framework powered by whole-genome sequencing
DiffInvex empirically infers a “neutral” mutation rate baseline for important, coding gene regions, by contrasting them with mutations in adjacent non-coding regions such as introns or intergenic regions. This removes the guesswork from the assessment of how different factors influence mutation rates and spectra during tumour evolution and chemotherapy.
Drawing on more than 11,000 human genomes from roughly 30 tissue types, DiffInvex has identified 11 genes whose mutations are favoured more strongly after exposure to specific types of chemotherapy, implicating well-known drivers such as PIK3CA, SMAD4 and STK11. These findings suggest that resistance to anticancer drugs is often mediated by the accumulation of additional driver mutations in known cancer genes rather than by specialized mutations in specific drug-resistance genes.
The study also compared 1,722 genomes from healthy tissues to matched tumour types and shows that mutations in ARID1A—long considered a tumour-suppressor driver—and in other cancer genes are frequently selected during normal ageing. These observations would therefore suggest that some so-called cancer drivers may be evolutionary relics rather than disease initiators.
“Our work reveals that cancer’s favourite strategy is not building bespoke shields against a particular drug, but rather boosting its core circuitry so that (almost) any blow hurts less,” says Dr. Supek.
Implications for precision oncology
The identification of “generalist” resistance paths opens the door to rational drug combinations: pairing standard chemotherapy with inhibitors that block PIK3CA or STK11 signalling, for example, might delay or prevent relapse. Meanwhile, recognition that some apparent driver mutations (such as ARID1A) pre-date cancer could improve early-detection panels and spare patients unnecessary worry.
“By disentangling treatment effects from background noise, DiffInvex could one day help clinicians predict the resistance pathways a patient’s tumour is likely to take – and cut them off in advance,” concludes Dr. Ahmed Khalil, first author of the study, a former postdoctoral fellow at IRB Barcelona, now a senior data scientist at IMIDomics, a biotech research company also located at the Barcelona Science Park.
This research project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the project “DECIDER”, the European Research Council (ERC) under the Starting Grant programme, the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación (previously Plan Nacional), and the Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA).
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-05-13
People with multiple long-term physical health conditions are at a significantly greater risk of developing depression, a study shows.
Researchers found that some combinations of illnesses – particularly cardiometabolic ones like diabetes and heart disease – could more than double the likelihood of a future depression diagnosis.
With multimorbidity – when patients live with two or more chronic conditions – continuing to put pressure on an already stretched healthcare ...
2025-05-13
Plants have small pores on the underside of their leaves, known as stomata. When the sun rises, these pores open and the plants absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere, which they need, in addition to sunlight and water, for photosynthesis. At the same time, water evaporates through the open stomata; for a tree, this may be several hundred liters per day.
When water is scarce, plants can close their stomata and thus prevent it from evaporating too much water. The fact that plants have this protective mechanism at their disposal is nothing new. Until now, however, it has not been clear when this closure occurs and what the trigger was. ...
2025-05-13
ROCHESTER, New York, USA, 29 April 2025 -- In a comprehensive Genomic Psychiatry review article published today, researchers from the University of Rochester Medical Center have synthesized decades of research on stress hormone systems in primate brains, potentially unlocking new paths toward treating stress-related psychiatric disorders. The article offers groundbreaking insights into how corticotropin releasing factor (CRF), a key stress hormone, interacts with dopamine neuron populations in ways that differ significantly between rodents and primates.
The Stress-Dopamine Connection: More Complex Than Previously Understood
Stress ...
2025-05-13
OTTAWA, Ontario, Canada, 13 May 2025 - In a comprehensive Genomic Press Commentary published today, researchers have identified what could be the first reliable biomarker for depression risk, potentially transforming how this devastating condition is identified and treated. The commentary examines recent findings demonstrating that individuals with depression consistently exhibit a functionally enlarged salience network compared to non-depressed controls.
Distinctive Brain Connectivity Pattern Identified
The salience network, a neural system responsible for attention allocation and switching between different brain ...
2025-05-13
Brief facts about the study: fertility // randomised, clinical trial // 1,466 women.
The study has been published in Frontiers in Endocrinology.
About 15 per cent of all couples of reproductive age are involuntarily childless. A major reason why so many need assisted reproduction is that nowadays more and more people are putting off starting a family.
“This is a global trend that is expected to increase in the coming years. In Europe alone, one million IVF treatments are carried out each year; in Sweden, the corresponding number is 25,000,” ...
2025-05-13
COLUMBUS, Ohio - As kids spend more time on screens, a new national survey conducted by Ipsos on behalf of The Kids Mental Health Foundation, founded by Nationwide Children’s Hospital, identifies parents’ greatest fears for their children around screen time.
The top three fears parents have around their child and screen time are: privacy and safety concerns (47%), exposure to misinformation (36%) and not socializing in person (34%). Fewer parents ranked concerns around body image and schoolwork high on their list.
“My biggest concerns with screens are making sure that my kids don't get exposed to things before I'm ready ...
2025-05-13
Fukuoka, Japan—In a paper published in Geophysical Research Letters, researchers from Kyushu University report on the activity of sporadic E layers—about 90-120 km above sea level—during the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm. The team found that the E layers were significantly enhanced during the recovery phase of the geomagnetic storm. Sporadic E layer, as the name suggests, is a phenomenon in which thin—about 1-5 km thick—but dense patches of ionized metals suddenly appear in the E layer of the ionosphere.
Moreover, the team found that these ...
2025-05-13
The genome structure — how genes are organized within DNA sequences in an organism — is fundamental to the processes and functions of organisms. A team at the University of Tokyo has developed a system to control and accelerate the evolution of changes in bacterial genome structure, targeting small “jumping genes,” or DNA sequences known as insertion sequences.
“Most of what we know about evolution comes from studying the past. But some events, like the origin of mitochondria or other organelles, leave few traces, making it hard to reconstruct how they happened,” explained ...
2025-05-13
Kyoto, Japan -- Stifling heat and sticky air often make summertime in the city uncomfortable. Due to the heat island effect, urban areas are significantly warmer than nearby rural areas, even at night. This, combined with more frequent extreme weather events caused by climate change, often render the city an unpleasant environment in the summer.
Urbanization and climate change modify the thermal environment of urban areas, with an expectation that urban disasters from extremely hot weather and heavy rainfall will only become more severe. Mitigating potential damage involves reducing the intensity of the heat island effect and adapting to climate ...
2025-05-13
Research from the University of Adelaide shows microbial communities in echidna pseudo-pouches undergo dramatic changes while the animal is lactating, which could help in creating an environment for their young, known as puggles, to thrive.
Echidnas are monotremes, which are the only mammals that lay eggs. The early developmental stage at which they hatch from their egg means that the puggles lack a functioning immune system.
“We know the reproductive microbiome is important to infant health, including for humans, but little is known about how it ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] DiffInvex reveals how cancers rewire driver genes to beat chemotherapy