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Cancer-Causative Mutations Occurring in Early Embryogenesis

Authors :
Fresia Pareja
Ryan N. Ptashkin
David N. Brown
Fatemeh Derakhshan
Pier Selenica
Edaise M. da Silva
Andrea M. Gazzo
Arnaud Da Cruz Paula
Kelsey Breen
Ronglai Shen
Antonio Marra
Ahmet Zehir
Ryma Benayed
Michael F. Berger
Ozge Ceyhan-Birsoy
Sowmya Jairam
Margaret Sheehan
Utsav Patel
Yelena Kemel
Jacklyn Casanova-Murphy
Christopher J. Schwartz
Mahsa Vahdatinia
Elizabeth Comen
Laetitia Borsu
Xin Pei
Nadeem Riaz
David H. Abramson
Britta Weigelt
Michael F. Walsh
Anna-Katerina Hadjantonakis
Marc Ladanyi
Kenneth Offit
Zsofia K. Stadler
Mark E. Robson
Jorge S. Reis-Filho
Diana Mandelker
Source :
Cancer Discov
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mosaic mutations in normal tissues can occur early in embryogenesis and be associated with hereditary cancer syndromes when affecting cancer susceptibility genes (CSG). Their contribution to apparently sporadic cancers is currently unknown. Analysis of paired tumor/blood sequencing data of 35,310 patients with cancer revealed 36 pathogenic mosaic variants affecting CSGs, most of which were not detected by prior clinical genetic testing. These CSG mosaic variants were consistently detected at varying variant allelic fractions in microdissected normal tissues (n = 48) from distinct embryonic lineages in all individuals tested, indicating their early embryonic origin, likely prior to gastrulation, and likely asymmetrical propagation. Tumor-specific biallelic inactivation of the CSG affected by a mosaic variant was observed in 91.7% (33/36) of cases, and tumors displayed the hallmark pathologic and/or genomic features of inactivation of the respective CSGs, establishing a causal link between CSG mosaic variants arising in early embryogenesis and the development of apparently sporadic cancers. Significance: Here, we demonstrate that mosaic variants in CSGs arising in early embryogenesis contribute to the oncogenesis of seemingly sporadic cancers. These variants can be systematically detected through the analysis of tumor/normal sequencing data, and their detection may affect therapeutic decisions as well as prophylactic measures for patients and their offspring. See related commentary by Liggett and Sankaran, p. 889. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 873

Details

ISSN :
21598290
Volume :
12
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0bf1caf0a1f2178716973873f6ba64fa