Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Exp Hematol. 2020 Mar;83:48-56. doi: 10.1016/j.exphem.2019.12.001. Epub 2019 Dec 12.
Over the course of the human life span, somatic DNA mutations accumulate in healthy tissues. This process has been most clearly described in blood and bone marrow, esophagus, colon, and skin, but cumulative DNA damage likely affects all tissues of the body. Although most acquired genetic variants have no discernable functional consequences, some randomly occurring somatic mutations confer a relative fitness advantage on a single stem cell and its progeny compared with surrounding cells, which may lead to progressive expansion of a clone (i.e., a genetically identical group of cells). When these mutations occur in a cell with the capacity to self-renew and expand, the mutations persist, and such clonal expansion is a risk factor for further mutation acquisition and clonal evolution. Hematopoietic stem cells are a special case of clonal expansion because both the stem cells and their blood cell progeny circulate in large numbers, and these cells are not subject to some of the anatomical restrictions that characterize other tissues in which somatic mutations conferring a fitness advantage also occur. Therefore, clonally restricted hematopoiesis can have biological and clinical consequences that are distinct from clonal expansions in other tissues. Such consequences include not only clonal progression to overt myeloid neoplasia (or, less commonly, to lymphoid neoplasia) driven by acquisition of secondary mutations in the cells of the expanded clone, but also cardiovascular events and, most likely, other diseases that are influenced by aberrant function of mutant blood cells. A more detailed understanding of how clonal hematopoiesis arises and how clonal selection and expansion occur, as well as development of strategies to avert the clinical consequences associated with clonal hematopoiesis, may both improve public health and yield more general insights into the biology of aging.
在人类的整个生命周期中,体细胞 DNA 突变会在健康组织中积累。这一过程在血液和骨髓、食管、结肠和皮肤中描述得最为清楚,但累积的 DNA 损伤可能会影响身体的所有组织。虽然大多数获得的遗传变异没有明显的功能后果,但一些随机发生的体细胞突变赋予单个干细胞及其后代相对于周围细胞的相对适应性优势,这可能导致克隆的逐渐扩大(即,遗传上相同的细胞群体)。当这些突变发生在具有自我更新和扩张能力的细胞中时,突变会持续存在,这种克隆扩张是进一步获得突变和克隆进化的风险因素。造血干细胞是克隆扩张的一个特殊情况,因为干细胞及其血细胞后代都大量循环,并且这些细胞不受某些解剖限制的影响,这些限制存在于其他组织中,其中体细胞突变赋予适应性优势。因此,克隆受限的造血作用可能具有不同于其他组织中克隆扩张的生物学和临床后果。这些后果不仅包括由于扩展克隆中的细胞获得继发性突变而导致的明显髓系肿瘤(或较少见的淋巴系肿瘤)的克隆进展,还包括心血管事件,以及很可能影响突变血细胞异常功能的其他疾病。更详细地了解克隆性造血作用是如何产生的,以及克隆选择和扩张是如何发生的,以及制定避免与克隆性造血作用相关的临床后果的策略,不仅可以改善公共卫生,还可以更深入地了解衰老的生物学。