| Literature DB >> 28467829 |
Nicholas K Hayward1,2, James S Wilmott1,3, Nicola Waddell2,4, Peter A Johansson2, Matthew A Field5, Katia Nones2,4, Ann-Marie Patch2,4, Hojabr Kakavand3, Ludmil B Alexandrov6, Hazel Burke1, Valerie Jakrot1, Stephen Kazakoff2,4, Oliver Holmes2,4, Conrad Leonard2,4, Radhakrishnan Sabarinathan7,8, Loris Mularoni7,8, Scott Wood2,4, Qinying Xu2,4, Nick Waddell4, Varsha Tembe9, Gulietta M Pupo9, Ricardo De Paoli-Iseppi3, Ricardo E Vilain3, Ping Shang3, Loretta M S Lau10, Rebecca A Dagg11, Sarah-Jane Schramm9, Antonia Pritchard2, Ken Dutton-Regester2, Felicity Newell2, Anna Fitzgerald12, Catherine A Shang12, Sean M Grimmond13, Hilda A Pickett10, Jean Y Yang14, Jonathan R Stretch1, Andreas Behren15, Richard F Kefford1,16, Peter Hersey1,17, Georgina V Long1,18, Jonathan Cebon15, Mark Shackleton19, Andrew J Spillane1, Robyn P M Saw1, Núria López-Bigas7,8,20, John V Pearson2,4, John F Thompson1, Richard A Scolyer1,3,21, Graham J Mann1,9.
Abstract
Melanoma of the skin is a common cancer only in Europeans, whereas it arises in internal body surfaces (mucosal sites) and on the hands and feet (acral sites) in people throughout the world. Here we report analysis of whole-genome sequences from cutaneous, acral and mucosal subtypes of melanoma. The heavily mutated landscape of coding and non-coding mutations in cutaneous melanoma resolved novel signatures of mutagenesis attributable to ultraviolet radiation. However, acral and mucosal melanomas were dominated by structural changes and mutation signatures of unknown aetiology, not previously identified in melanoma. The number of genes affected by recurrent mutations disrupting non-coding sequences was similar to that affected by recurrent mutations to coding sequences. Significantly mutated genes included BRAF, CDKN2A, NRAS and TP53 in cutaneous melanoma, BRAF, NRAS and NF1 in acral melanoma and SF3B1 in mucosal melanoma. Mutations affecting the TERT promoter were the most frequent of all; however, neither they nor ATRX mutations, which correlate with alternative telomere lengthening, were associated with greater telomere length. Most melanomas had potentially actionable mutations, most in components of the mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphoinositol kinase pathways. The whole-genome mutation landscape of melanoma reveals diverse carcinogenic processes across its subtypes, some unrelated to sun exposure, and extends potential involvement of the non-coding genome in its pathogenesis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28467829 DOI: 10.1038/nature22071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962