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Data from Single-Hit Inactivation Drove Tumor Suppressor Genes Out of the X Chromosome during Evolution

Authors :
William Ka Kei Wu
Lin Zhang
Matthew Tak Vai Chan
Jun Yu
Sunny Hei Wong
Ho Ko
Danny Cheuk Wing Chan
Xiaoting Chen
Qingpeng Zhang
Dariusz Plewczynski
Ka-Fai To
Wei Kang
Alfred Sze Lok Cheng
Maggie Haitian Wang
Tony Gin
Xiaodong Liu
Huarong Chen
Chuan Xie
Judeng Zeng
Hung Chan
Qing Li
Dan Huang
Xiangchun Li
Wei Hu
Xiansong Wang
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Cancer-related genes are under intense evolutionary pressure. In this study, we conjecture that X-linked tumor suppressor genes (TSG) are not protected by the Knudson's two-hit mechanism and are therefore subject to negative selection. Accordingly, nearly all mammalian species exhibited lower TSG-to-noncancer gene ratios on their X chromosomes compared with nonmammalian species. Synteny analysis revealed that mammalian X-linked TSGs were depleted shortly after the emergence of the XY sex-determination system. A phylogeny-based model unveiled a higher X chromosome-to-autosome relocation flux for human TSGs. This was verified in other mammals by assessing the concordance/discordance of chromosomal locations of mammalian TSGs and their orthologs in Xenopus tropicalis. In humans, X-linked TSGs are younger or larger in size. Consistently, pan-cancer analysis revealed more frequent nonsynonymous somatic mutations of X-linked TSGs. These findings suggest that relocation of TSGs out of the X chromosome could confer a survival advantage by facilitating evasion of single-hit inactivation.Significance:This work unveils extensive trafficking of TSGs from the X chromosome to autosomes during evolution, thus identifying X-linked TSGs as a genetic Achilles' heel in tumor suppression.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8a6c12e1b01a28aa0158ff65e04dd66f