Back to Search Start Over

Genomic signature of Fanconi anaemia DNA repair pathway deficiency in cancer

Authors :
Andrew L. H. Webster
Mathijs A. Sanders
Krupa Patel
Ralf Dietrich
Raymond J. Noonan
Francis P. Lach
Ryan R. White
Audrey Goldfarb
Kevin Hadi
Matthew M. Edwards
Frank X. Donovan
Remco M. Hoogenboezem
Moonjung Jung
Sunandini Sridhar
Tom F. Wiley
Olivier Fedrigo
Huasong Tian
Joel Rosiene
Thomas Heineman
Jennifer A. Kennedy
Lorenzo Bean
Rasim O. Rosti
Rebecca Tryon
Ashlyn-Maree Gonzalez
Allana Rosenberg
Ji-Dung Luo
Thomas S. Carroll
Sanjana Shroff
Michael Beaumont
Eunike Velleuer
Jeff C. Rastatter
Susanne I. Wells
Jordi Surrallés
Grover Bagby
Margaret L. MacMillan
John E. Wagner
Maria Cancio
Farid Boulad
Theresa Scognamiglio
Roger Vaughan
Kristin G. Beaumont
Amnon Koren
Marcin Imielinski
Settara C. Chandrasekharappa
Arleen D. Auerbach
Bhuvanesh Singh
David I. Kutler
Peter J. Campbell
Agata Smogorzewska
Hematology
Source :
Nature, 612(7940), 495-502. Nature Publishing Group, Nature
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Fanconi anaemia (FA), a model syndrome of genome instability, is caused by a deficiency in DNA interstrand crosslink repair resulting in chromosome breakage1–3. The FA repair pathway protects against endogenous and exogenous carcinogenic aldehydes4–7. Individuals with FA are hundreds to thousands fold more likely to develop head and neck (HNSCC), oesophageal and anogenital squamous cell carcinomas8 (SCCs). Molecular studies of SCCs from individuals with FA (FA SCCs) are limited, and it is unclear how FA SCCs relate to sporadic HNSCCs primarily driven by tobacco and alcohol exposure or infection with human papillomavirus9 (HPV). Here, by sequencing genomes and exomes of FA SCCs, we demonstrate that the primary genomic signature of FA repair deficiency is the presence of high numbers of structural variants. Structural variants are enriched for small deletions, unbalanced translocations and fold-back inversions, and are often connected, thereby forming complex rearrangements. They arise in the context of TP53 loss, but not in the context of HPV infection, and lead to somatic copy-number alterations of HNSCC driver genes. We further show that FA pathway deficiency may lead to epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and enhanced keratinocyte-intrinsic inflammatory signalling, which would contribute to the aggressive nature of FA SCCs. We propose that the genomic instability in sporadic HPV-negative HNSCC may arise as a result of the FA repair pathway being overwhelmed by DNA interstrand crosslink damage caused by alcohol and tobacco-derived aldehydes, making FA SCC a powerful model to study tumorigenesis resulting from DNA-crosslinking damage.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
612
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b15cd1011ef44b739a461beaa02a1cb6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05253-4