Integrative spatial and multi-omic profiling in bladder cancer links L1 retrotransposition to extrachromosomal DNA, genomic instability, and viral mimicry response
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Bladder cancer is one of the most frequent cancers and shows high recurrence rates. Despite recent advances, key knowledge gaps remain in understanding the molecular mechanisms of disease progression, which would support the development of early detection methods and effective personalized treatments. We apply integrated multi-omics and spatial analyses in a cohort of 49 bladder cancer patients to comprehensively profile genetic, epigenetic, transcriptomic, and spatial features of bladder cancer, alongside cell-free DNA blood analysis. Combining low-pass whole-genome cell-free DNA sequencing, Oxford Nanopore long-read tumor DNA sequencing, RNA-sequencing, and spatial transcriptomics, we provide insights into molecular alterations driving bladder cancer. We show frequent somatic LINE-1 (L1) insertions, with up to more than 500 insertions per tumor. We find that L1 insertions are active and occur early in bladder cancer development. We link aberrant somatic L1 insertion in bladder cancer with downstream genomic rearrangements and chromosomal instability, with an excess of structural variants and extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) in patients with particularly high L1 counts. By detecting ecDNA within tissue architecture using spatial transcriptomics, we identify the localization of ecDNA to distinct spatial clusters with differential expression of APOBEC3B and immune response pathways. These results, combined with replication timing analysis and gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA), offer evidence for the previously hypothesized viral mimicry response to L1 retrotransposition, mediated via APOBEC3B-editing, the cGAS-STING pathway, and RIG-I and MDA5 responses.