Out of sequence?
Scientists debate whether it’s time to tackle tumor genomes and epigenomes
On a cold January afternoon, Eric
Lander sits in
his office at the Broad Institute, explaining a new
effort to sequence the DNA of tumors, when his cell
phone rings. He answers and listens.
“Do you want me to come over to the hospital tonight?” he
asks, then covers the mouthpiece and whispers, “I just want to
make arrangements to visit my cousin. Unfortunately, he has a very serious
cancer, so this is quite relevant to our conversation.”
Lander’s cousin was diagnosed with a type of bile duct cancer
at the end of December. This form of cancer is relatively rare, and without
known therapies.
Getting off the phone, Lander notes that “we could try to use
therapies that were developed for other cancers to treat my cousin, but
we don’t know which genes are involved, and that’s very frustrating.”
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Illustration: James O'Brien
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The Broad is participating in a new federally funded venture that could
help patients such as Lander’s cousin. The National Cancer Institute
recently kicked off a pilot project to sequence the DNA of tumors from
patients with particular types of cancer. If the pilot succeeds, the
government might fund a massive cancer-sequencing project to determine
the genetic components of all types of cancer. Many involve mutations
to the same genes, and the resulting information would help researchers
map relationships between cancers.
But some scientists feel that NCI should wait to launch the project
when federal funding for biomedical research expands. The National Institute
of Health’s budget doubled between 1998 and 2003 but is now dropping
in real dollars each year. Whitehead Member Robert
Weinberg suggests
that grant funding should emphasize small, investigator-initiated projects
rather than large, collaborative ones.
“I’m not at all convinced that, given the current NIH grant
funding climate, we can afford to invest enormous amounts of money in
sequencing cancer genomes,” says Weinberg. “The larger-scale
projects generate large databases, which are useful to smaller-scale
scientists, but on their own, larger-scale projects hardly yield as much
conceptual bang for the buck as smaller-scale projects,” he declares. “I
think there are still some major unsolved conceptual problems that only
smaller, more focused research efforts can address.”
Lander, who is both a Whitehead Member and Director of the Broad, counters
that the pilot project will cost just 0.5 percent of the NCI budget.
“I can’t imagine why you wouldn’t spend 0.5 percent
of the budget on cancer genome sequencing, because it would make the
other 99.5 percent of the budget twice as efficient,” he says. “And
the Human Genome Project taught us that setting a goal often causes costs
to drop as the technology grows more efficient. This makes more science
possible.”
Sequencing the epigenomes
A group of scientists recently proposed another giant project—sequencing
several human epigenomes—to advance cancer research. The epigenome
lies above the DNA sequence and includes methyl marks
as well as proteins that package DNA (for more information
see "The Unusual Suspect”).
Aberrant methylation plays a role in many types of
cancer.
As president of the American Association for Cancer Research, Peter
Jones helped to develop a blueprint for an international project to sequence
several human epigenomes. Eventually, he hopes to compare the epigenomes
of cancer patients with those of healthy individuals.
“The epigenome is the missing piece between genes and proteins,
and we need the sequence to fully understand cancer and make accurate
diagnoses,” says Jones, director of the USC/Norris Comprehensive
Cancer Center. Like Lander, he believes that larger-scale projects make
smaller-scale projects more efficient.
But the proposal faces critics. Some wonder if we know enough about
the epigenome to launch such a monumental project. Labs are still uncovering
layer upon layer of epigenetic marks that current sequencing technologies
miss. And the project requires sequencing numerous epigenomes, because
each cell type contains a different set of epigenetic marks.
“My feeling is an epigenome project is a bit premature,” says
Emma Whitelaw, of Queensland Institute of Medical Research. “We could
save a lot of money by waiting a few years, by which time we should know
more about what to look for and where to look for it.”
| Written by Alyssa Kneller. |
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