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| Evidence pillar | What it supports | What to be skeptical about |
|---|---|---|
| Tunable methotrexate selection + isolated resistant clones in multiple cell lines (HeLa, 293T, HT-29, plus others described). | Rapid appearance of DHFR amplification in DMs/HSRs and selection-dependent shifts in DM vs low-level copy gains; WGS-FISH concordance; resistance-associated gene dosage. | In vitro selection can create trajectories that differ from in vivo tumor evolution; clonal bottlenecks and laboratory stressors may bias which rearrangement types emerge. |
| Chromothripsis inference from WGS breakpoint clustering/junction patterns; distinct rearrangement “profiles”. | Supports that chromothripsis-like catastrophic shattering and religation events generate DM architectures (including co-ligation of non-contiguous fragments and excision/circularization routes). | “Chromothripsis calling” depends on operational criteria and sensitivity; alternative rearrangement processes may mimic some signatures, and power can be limited when event counts are low. |
| Repair inhibition perturbations (PARP inhibitors; DNA-PKcs inhibitors) with colony and DM readouts. | Tests whether PARP/DNA-PKcs repair is necessary for DM formation and thus for chromothripsis-driven amplification routes. | Drug inhibitors can have broader effects (cell cycle arrest, replication stress) that indirectly affect the probability of catastrophic rearrangements. |
| Longitudinal adaptation and live-cell imaging of bridge/bridge rupture/micronuclei dynamics. | Links HSR fragmentation in interphase bridges to micronuclei formation that can act as chromothripsis substrates for further DM evolution. | Imaging shows correlation with bridge rupture; mapping to specific subsequent DM structures in individual cells is difficult, so “mechanism” is strongest when WGS endpoints converge on predicted trajectories. |
| DNA damage perturbations + in situ Hi-C for ecDNA integration tethering. | Shows DM integration at ectopic sites near chromosome ends and biased tethering to chromosome end regions. | Hi-C tethering is a population measurement; “preference” may reflect multiple layers (chromatin organization, replication timing, accessibility) not resolved in the paper. |
| Limited clinical extension: vemurafenib-resistant colorectal cancers with BRAF V600E and pre/post biopsies. | Provides real-tumor context that chromothripsis-associated amplification architectures can occur during acquired therapy resistance. | Only two patients are presented; generality across tumor types and treatment regimens remains uncertain. |
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