频率依赖的生态相互作用增加了先前存在的耐药性的流行和分布。

PRX life Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-03 DOI:10.1103/prxlife.2.023010
Jeff Maltas, Dagim Shiferaw Tadele, Arda Durmaz, Christopher D McFarland, Michael Hinczewski, Jacob G Scott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从传染病到癌症,抗药性的演变仍然是现代医学面临的主要挑战之一。在缺乏治疗的情况下,许多这些赋予耐药性的突变往往会带来巨大的适应性成本。因此,我们预计这些突变体将经历净化选择,并迅速灭绝。然而,在非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)和黑色素瘤的靶向癌症治疗中,经常观察到耐药疟疾对先前存在的耐药性。解决这一明显矛盾的方法有多种形式,从空间救援到简单的突变供应论证。最近,在一种进化的耐药NSCLC细胞系中,我们发现祖先和耐药突变体之间的频率依赖的生态相互作用在没有治疗的情况下改善了耐药的成本。在这里,我们假设频率依赖的生态相互作用通常在预先存在的耐药性的流行中起主要作用。我们将数值模拟与稳健的分析近似相结合,为研究频率依赖的生态相互作用对预先存在的抗性进化动力学的影响提供了严格的数学框架。首先,我们发现生态相互作用显著地扩展了我们期望观察到预先存在的抗性的参数范围。其次,即使突变体和祖先之间的积极生态相互作用很少,这些抗性克隆也提供了进化抗性的主要模式,因为即使是微弱的积极相互作用也会导致更长的灭绝时间。然后我们发现,即使在突变供应本身就足以预测先前存在的抗性的情况下,频率依赖的生态力量仍然贡献了强大的进化压力,选择了越来越积极的生态效应(负频率依赖的选择)。最后,我们对非小细胞肺癌靶向治疗中最常见的几种临床观察到的耐药机制进行基因工程改造,非小细胞肺癌是一种因预先存在耐药性而臭名昭著的治疗方法。我们发现每个基因工程突变体都与其祖先表现出积极的生态相互作用。总的来说,这些结果表明,频率依赖的生态效应在形成预先存在的抗性的进化动力学中起着至关重要的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Frequency-Dependent Ecological Interactions Increase the Prevalence, and Shape the Distribution, of Preexisting Drug Resistance.

The evolution of resistance remains one of the primary challenges for modern medicine, from infectious diseases to cancers. Many of these resistance-conferring mutations often carry a substantial fitness cost in the absence of treatment. As a result, we would expect these mutants to undergo purifying selection and be rapidly driven to extinction. Nevertheless, preexisting resistance is frequently observed from drug-resistant malaria to targeted cancer therapies in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and melanoma. Solutions to this apparent paradox have taken several forms, from spatial rescue to simple mutation supply arguments. Recently, in an evolved resistant NSCLC cell line, we found that frequency-dependent ecological interactions between ancestor and resistant mutant ameliorate the cost of resistance in the absence of treatment. Here, we hypothesize that frequency-dependent ecological interactions in general play a major role in the prevalence of preexisting resistance. We combine numerical simulations with robust analytical approximations to provide a rigorous mathematical framework for studying the effects of frequency-dependent ecological interactions on the evolutionary dynamics of preexisting resistance. First, we find that ecological interactions significantly expand the parameter regime under which we expect to observe preexisting resistance. Next, even when positive ecological interactions between mutants and ancestors are rare, these resistant clones provide the primary mode of evolved resistance because even weak positive interaction leads to significantly longer extinction times. We then find that even in the case where mutation supply alone is sufficient to predict preexisting resistance, frequency-dependent ecological forces still contribute a strong evolutionary pressure that selects for increasingly positive ecological effects (negative frequency-dependent selection). Finally, we genetically engineer several of the most common clinically observed resistance mechanisms to targeted therapies in NSCLC, a treatment notorious for preexisting resistance. We find that each engineered mutant displays a positive ecological interaction with their ancestor. As a whole, these results suggest that frequency-dependent ecological effects can play a crucial role in shaping the evolutionary dynamics of preexisting resistance.

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