| Literature DB >> 33007263 |
Kevin Hadi1, Xiaotong Yao2, Julie M Behr2, Aditya Deshpande2, Charalampos Xanthopoulakis3, Huasong Tian1, Sarah Kudman4, Joel Rosiene1, Madison Darmofal2, Joseph DeRose5, Rick Mortensen5, Emily M Adney1, Alon Shaiber6, Zoran Gajic5, Michael Sigouros7, Kenneth Eng8, Jeremiah A Wala9, Kazimierz O Wrzeszczyński5, Kanika Arora5, Minita Shah5, Anne-Katrin Emde5, Vanessa Felice5, Mayu O Frank10, Robert B Darnell10, Mahmoud Ghandi11, Franklin Huang12, Sally Dewhurst13, John Maciejowski14, Titia de Lange13, Jeremy Setton14, Nadeem Riaz15, Jorge S Reis-Filho16, Simon Powell14, David A Knowles17, Ed Reznik18, Bud Mishra19, Rameen Beroukhim20, Michael C Zody5, Nicolas Robine5, Kenji M Oman21, Carissa A Sanchez21, Mary K Kuhner22, Lucian P Smith23, Patricia C Galipeau21, Thomas G Paulson21, Brian J Reid24, Xiaohong Li21, David Wilkes4, Andrea Sboner25, Juan Miguel Mosquera4, Olivier Elemento25, Marcin Imielinski26.
Abstract
Cancer genomes often harbor hundreds of somatic DNA rearrangement junctions, many of which cannot be easily classified into simple (e.g., deletion) or complex (e.g., chromothripsis) structural variant classes. Applying a novel genome graph computational paradigm to analyze the topology of junction copy number (JCN) across 2,778 tumor whole-genome sequences, we uncovered three novel complex rearrangement phenomena: pyrgo, rigma, and tyfonas. Pyrgo are "towers" of low-JCN duplications associated with early-replicating regions, superenhancers, and breast or ovarian cancers. Rigma comprise "chasms" of low-JCN deletions enriched in late-replicating fragile sites and gastrointestinal carcinomas. Tyfonas are "typhoons" of high-JCN junctions and fold-back inversions associated with expressed protein-coding fusions, breakend hypermutation, and acral, but not cutaneous, melanomas. Clustering of tumors according to genome graph-derived features identified subgroups associated with DNA repair defects and poor prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: aneuploidy; cancer evolution; cancer genomics; chromothripsis; fragile sites; genome graphs; mutational processes; phasing; structural variation; superenhancers
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33007263 PMCID: PMC7912537 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.08.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 66.850