In the progression from Inflammatory Bowel Disease to associated cancer, the clonal mutational landscape shifts from selection of mutations in inflammatory genes to selection for cancer-driver mutations. How prevalence and expansion of either type of mutant clones could be impacted by the cellular environments in which they arise, and how this affects the neoplastic outcome of colitis, remains unknown. Here, we combine in vivo lineage tracing, in silico modelling, mutational profiling and spatial transcriptomics in a mouse model of colitis-associated tumorigenesis to capture clone fates associated with chronic inflammation. We identify epithelial- and immune-enriched neighbourhoods and propose a model in which establishment of a reparative tissue environment facilitates tumour initiation by promoting the selection and expansion of pro-oncogenic clones, reducing the span of inflammation-resistant neighbourhoods containing non-oncogenic clones.
Moutin et al. (Tue,) studied this question.