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Genomic catastrophes frequently arise in esophageal adenocarcinoma and drive tumorigenesis

Authors :
Matthew F Anderson
David I. Watson
Craig Nourse
David Miller
Sean M. Grimmond
Peter J. Campbell
Yue Hang Tang
Suzanne Manning
Andrew Barbour
Nicholas K. Hayward
Oliver Holmes
Derek J. Nancarrow
David C. Whiteman
Timothy J. C. Bruxner
David C. Gotley
Angelika N. Christ
Damian J. Hussey
J. Lynn Fink
Lutz Krause
Conrad Leonard
Kelly A. Loffler
Katia Nones
Peter T. Simpson
Michael C.J. Quinn
Ann-Marie Patch
Stephen H. Kazakoff
Reginald V. Lord
Ehsan Nourbakhsh
Nicola Waddell
Kelly Quek
Senel Idrisoglu
Lynne Reid
John V. Pearson
Qinying Xu
Peter Bailey
Wayne A. Phillips
Felicity Newell
Guy Lampe
Ivon Harliwong
Nicci Wayte
Scott Wood
Peter Wilson
B. Mark Smithers
Nick Waddell
Source :
Nature communications
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2014.

Abstract

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) incidence is rapidly increasing in Western countries. A better understanding of EAC underpins efforts to improve early detection and treatment outcomes. While large EAC exome sequencing efforts to date have found recurrent loss-of-function mutations, oncogenic driving events have been underrepresented. Here we use a combination of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and single-nucleotide polymorphism-array profiling to show that genomic catastrophes are frequent in EAC, with almost a third (32%, n=40/123) undergoing chromothriptic events. WGS of 22 EAC cases show that catastrophes may lead to oncogene amplification through chromothripsis-derived double-minute chromosome formation (MYC and MDM2) or breakage-fusion-bridge (KRAS, MDM2 and RFC3). Telomere shortening is more prominent in EACs bearing localized complex rearrangements. Mutational signature analysis also confirms that extreme genomic instability in EAC can be driven by somatic BRCA2 mutations. These findings suggest that genomic catastrophes have a significant role in the malignant transformation of EAC.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cc26942b14c6a13c64af25ed731334c3