| Literature DB >> 29662167 |
David C Wedge1,2,3, Gunes Gundem4,5, Thomas Mitchell4,6,7, Dan J Woodcock8, Inigo Martincorena4, Mohammed Ghori4, Jorge Zamora4, Adam Butler4, Hayley Whitaker9, Zsofia Kote-Jarai10, Ludmil B Alexandrov4, Peter Van Loo4,11, Charlie E Massie7,12, Stefan Dentro8,4,11, Anne Y Warren13, Clare Verrill14,15, Dan M Berney16, Nening Dennis17, Sue Merson10, Steve Hawkins7, William Howat13, Yong-Jie Lu16, Adam Lambert15, Jonathan Kay9, Barbara Kremeyer4, Katalin Karaszi15, Hayley Luxton9, Niedzica Camacho5,10, Luke Marsden15, Sandra Edwards10, Lucy Matthews15, Valeria Bo18, Daniel Leongamornlert4,10, Stuart McLaren4, Anthony Ng19, Yongwei Yu20, Hongwei Zhang20, Tokhir Dadaev10, Sarah Thomas17, Douglas F Easton21, Mahbubl Ahmed10, Elizabeth Bancroft10,17, Cyril Fisher17, Naomi Livni17, David Nicol17, Simon Tavaré18, Pelvender Gill15, Christopher Greenman22, Vincent Khoo17, Nicholas Van As17, Pardeep Kumar17, Christopher Ogden17, Declan Cahill17, Alan Thompson17, Erik Mayer17, Edward Rowe17, Tim Dudderidge17, Vincent Gnanapragasam6,23, Nimish C Shah6, Keiran Raine4, David Jones4, Andrew Menzies4, Lucy Stebbings4, Jon Teague4, Steven Hazell17, Cathy Corbishley24, Johann de Bono10, Gerhardt Attard10, William Isaacs25, Tapio Visakorpi26, Michael Fraser27, Paul C Boutros28,29,30, Robert G Bristow27,29,31, Paul Workman10, Chris Sander32, Freddie C Hamdy15, Andrew Futreal4, Ultan McDermott4, Bissan Al-Lazikani10, Andrew G Lynch18,33, G Steven Bova25,26, Christopher S Foster34,35, Daniel S Brewer10,22,36, David E Neal7,23, Colin S Cooper10,22, Rosalind A Eeles37,38.
Abstract
Prostate cancer represents a substantial clinical challenge because it is difficult to predict outcome and advanced disease is often fatal. We sequenced the whole genomes of 112 primary and metastatic prostate cancer samples. From joint analysis of these cancers with those from previous studies (930 cancers in total), we found evidence for 22 previously unidentified putative driver genes harboring coding mutations, as well as evidence for NEAT1 and FOXA1 acting as drivers through noncoding mutations. Through the temporal dissection of aberrations, we identified driver mutations specifically associated with steps in the progression of prostate cancer, establishing, for example, loss of CHD1 and BRCA2 as early events in cancer development of ETS fusion-negative cancers. Computational chemogenomic (canSAR) analysis of prostate cancer mutations identified 11 targets of approved drugs, 7 targets of investigational drugs, and 62 targets of compounds that may be active and should be considered candidates for future clinical trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29662167 PMCID: PMC6372064 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-018-0086-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330