| Literature DB >> 27538953 |
Jill C Rubinstein1,2, Taylor C Brown1,2, Emily R Christison-Lagay2, Yawei Zhang3, John W Kunstman1,2, C Christofer Juhlin1,2,4, Carol Nelson-Williams5, Gerald Goh5,6, Courtney E Quinn2, Glenda G Callender2, Robert Udelsman2, Richard P Lifton5,7, Reju Korah1,2, Tobias Carling8,9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer is increasingly understood to arise in the context of dynamically evolving genomes with continuously generated variants subject to selective pressures. Diverse mutations have been identified in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), but unifying theories underlying genomic change are lacking. Applying a framework of somatic evolution, we sought to broaden understanding of the PTC genome through identification of global trends that help explain risk of tumorigenesis.Entities:
Keywords: Exome sequencing; Papillary thyroid cancer; Somatic evolution
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27538953 PMCID: PMC4989347 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2665-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Single Nucleotide Substitution Signatures. Pairwise comparison of each PTC with its matched ANT defines three subsets of SNSs, those unique to the PTC (right), those unique to the ANT (left), and the Common subset (middle). PTCs share between 57 and 88 % (mean 76 %) of their SNSs with the background ANT in which they arise. BRAF-mutated PTCs and patients over 45 years of age have a greater number of SNSs. (M = Male, F = Female; A = African American, C = Caucasian, H = Hispanic, O = Other; TN refers to the AJCC TNM staging system)
Fig. 2a Inter-sample heterogeneity. SNS signatures demonstrate a mean overlap of 28 % and 30.6 % between any two samples in the Common subset and blood samples. The low outliers in each of these groups represent samples from African-American patients. The Unique-to-ANT and Unique-to-PTC subsets have an even larger degree of diversity, sharing a mean of only 6.0 % and 4.9 % of their SNSs. b Comparison of each sample with its matched blood demonstrates that the majority of Common subset SNSs (mean 80.9 %) are also found in the blood samples. The Unique-to-ANT and Unique-to-PTC subsets share only 10.8 % and 14.3 % of SNSs with their matched blood
Fig. 3Mutational spectra. The SNS signatures of the Common subsets and the blood samples demonstrate a dominance of C-to-T transitions across the cohort. Those SNSs that are specific to the thyroid gland, the Unique-to-ANT and the Unique-to-PTC Subsets, demonstrate a significant shift toward C-to-A transversions
Fig. 4Predicted impact of SNS on protein function. Based upon computational prediction with PolyPhen-2, the observed shift toward increased numbers of C-to-A transversions is accompanied by an increased likelihood of accruing damaging variants in both the Unique-to-PTC and Unique-to-ANT Subsets (p < 0.0001)
Fig. 5Non-synonymous SNSs in the MAPK Pathway. A number of recurrently altered genes are identified throughout the cohort, particularly MAP3K4, CACNA1B, and PAK2. Each of the BRAF-mutated samples contains at least one non-synonymous SNS in an additional MAPK pathway gene in the Common Subset (gene and sample IDs provided in Additional file 7: Table S2)