Decay of driver mutations shapes the landscape of intestinal transformation
Colorectal cancer (CRC) has traditionally been thought to develop through stepwise mutation of theAPCtumour suppressor and other driver genes, coupled with expansion of positively selected clones. However, recent publications show that many premalignant lesions comprise multiple clones expressing different mutant APC proteins1,2,3,4. Here, by mediating transformation on different mouse backgrounds containing mutations inKrasor other common CRC driver genes, we establish that the presence of diverse priming events in the normal mouse intestinal epithelium can change the transformation and clonal-selection landscape, permitting the fixation of strong driver mutations inApcandCtnnb1that are otherwise lost due to negative selection. These findings, combined with our demonstration of mutational patterns consistent with similar priming events in human CRC, suggest that the order in which driver mutations occur in intestinal epithelium can determine whether clones are positively or negatively selected and can shape subsequent tumour development.