| Literature DB >> 24469795 |
Carl D Morrison1, Pengyuan Liu, Anna Woloszynska-Read, Jianmin Zhang, Wei Luo, Maochun Qin, Wiam Bshara, Jeffrey M Conroy, Linda Sabatini, Peter Vedell, Donghai Xiong, Song Liu, Jianmin Wang, He Shen, Yinwei Li, Angela R Omilian, Annette Hill, Karen Head, Khurshid Guru, Dimiter Kunnev, Robert Leach, Kevin H Eng, Christopher Darlak, Christopher Hoeflich, Srividya Veeranki, Sean Glenn, Ming You, Steven C Pruitt, Candace S Johnson, Donald L Trump.
Abstract
Using complete genome analysis, we sequenced five bladder tumors accrued from patients with muscle-invasive transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder (TCC-UB) and identified a spectrum of genomic aberrations. In three tumors, complex genotype changes were noted. All three had tumor protein p53 mutations and a relatively large number of single-nucleotide variants (SNVs; average of 11.2 per megabase), structural variants (SVs; average of 46), or both. This group was best characterized by chromothripsis and the presence of subclonal populations of neoplastic cells or intratumoral mutational heterogeneity. Here, we provide evidence that the process of chromothripsis in TCC-UB is mediated by nonhomologous end-joining using kilobase, rather than megabase, fragments of DNA, which we refer to as "stitchers," to repair this process. We postulate that a potential unifying theme among tumors with the more complex genotype group is a defective replication-licensing complex. A second group (two bladder tumors) had no chromothripsis, and a simpler genotype, WT tumor protein p53, had relatively few SNVs (average of 5.9 per megabase) and only a single SV. There was no evidence of a subclonal population of neoplastic cells. In this group, we used a preclinical model of bladder carcinoma cell lines to study a unique SV (translocation and amplification) of the gene glutamate receptor ionotropic N-methyl D-aspertate as a potential new therapeutic target in bladder cancer.Entities:
Keywords: GRIN2A; next-generation sequencing; replication; tumor heterogeneity
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24469795 PMCID: PMC3926024 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1313580111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205