| Literature DB >> 32025019 |
Claudia Calabrese1, Natalie R Davidson2,3,4,5,6, Deniz Demircioğlu7,8, Nuno A Fonseca1, Yao He9, André Kahles2,3,5,6, Kjong-Van Lehmann2,3,5,6, Fenglin Liu9, Yuichi Shiraishi10, Cameron M Soulette11, Lara Urban1, Liliana Greger1, Siliang Li12,13, Dongbing Liu12,13, Marc D Perry14,15, Qian Xiang14, Fan Zhang9, Junjun Zhang14, Peter Bailey16, Serap Erkek17, Katherine A Hoadley18, Yong Hou12,13, Matthew R Huska19, Helena Kilpinen20, Jan O Korbel17, Maximillian G Marin11, Julia Markowski19, Tannistha Nandi8, Qiang Pan-Hammarström12,21, Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu22,23,24, Reiner Siebert25, Stefan G Stark2,3,5,6, Hong Su12,13, Patrick Tan8,26, Sebastian M Waszak17, Christina Yung14, Shida Zhu12,13, Philip Awadalla14,27, Chad J Creighton28, Matthew Meyerson22,23,24, B F Francis Ouellette27, Kui Wu12,13, Huanming Yang12, Alvis Brazma1, Angela N Brooks29,30,31, Jonathan Göke8,32, Gunnar Rätsch33,34,35,36,37, Roland F Schwarz1,19,38,39, Oliver Stegle1,17,39, Zemin Zhang9.
Abstract
Transcript alterations often result from somatic changes in cancer genomes1. Various forms of RNA alterations have been described in cancer, including overexpression2, altered splicing3 and gene fusions4; however, it is difficult to attribute these to underlying genomic changes owing to heterogeneity among patients and tumour types, and the relatively small cohorts of patients for whom samples have been analysed by both transcriptome and whole-genome sequencing. Here we present, to our knowledge, the most comprehensive catalogue of cancer-associated gene alterations to date, obtained by characterizing tumour transcriptomes from 1,188 donors of the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA)5. Using matched whole-genome sequencing data, we associated several categories of RNA alterations with germline and somatic DNA alterations, and identified probable genetic mechanisms. Somatic copy-number alterations were the major drivers of variations in total gene and allele-specific expression. We identified 649 associations of somatic single-nucleotide variants with gene expression in cis, of which 68.4% involved associations with flanking non-coding regions of the gene. We found 1,900 splicing alterations associated with somatic mutations, including the formation of exons within introns in proximity to Alu elements. In addition, 82% of gene fusions were associated with structural variants, including 75 of a new class, termed 'bridged' fusions, in which a third genomic location bridges two genes. We observed transcriptomic alteration signatures that differ between cancer types and have associations with variations in DNA mutational signatures. This compendium of RNA alterations in the genomic context provides a rich resource for identifying genes and mechanisms that are functionally implicated in cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32025019 PMCID: PMC7054216 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-1970-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962