Back to Search Start Over

Evaluation of whole genome sequencing utility in identifying driver alterations in cancer genome

Authors :
Takeshi Nagashima
Ken Yamaguchi
Kenichi Urakami
Yuji Shimoda
Sumiko Ohnami
Keiichi Ohshima
Tomoe Tanabe
Akane Naruoka
Fukumi Kamada
Masakuni Serizawa
Keiichi Hatakeyama
Shumpei Ohnami
Koji Maruyama
Tohru Mochizuki
Maki Mizuguchi
Akio Shiomi
Yasuhisa Ohde
Etsuro Bando
Teiichi Sugiura
Takashi Mukaigawa
Seiichiro Nishimura
Yasuyuki Hirashima
Koichi Mitsuya
Shusuke Yoshikawa
Yoshio Kiyohara
Yasuhiro Tsubosa
Hirohisa Katagiri
Masashi Niwakawa
Kaoru Takahashi
Hiroya Kashiwagi
Yoshichika Yasunaga
Yuji Ishida
Takashi Sugino
Hirotsugu Kenmotsu
Masanori Terashima
Mitsuru Takahashi
Katsuhiko Uesaka
Yasuto Akiyama
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract In cancer genome analysis, identifying pathogenic alterations and assessing their effects on oncogenic processes is important. Although whole exome sequencing (WES) can effectively detect such changes, driver alterations could not be identified in 27.8% of the cases, according to a previous study. The objectives of the present study were to evaluate the utility of whole genome sequencing (WGS) and clarify its differences with WES in terms of driver alteration detection. For this purpose, WGS analysis was conducted on 177 driverless WES samples, selected from 5,480 fresh frozen samples derived from 5,140 Japanese patients with cancer. These samples were selected as primary tumor, both WES and transcriptome profiling were performed, estimated tumor content of ≥ 30%, and no driver alterations were identified by WES. WGS identified driver and likely driver alterations in 68.4 and 22.6% of the samples, respectively. The most frequent alteration type was oncogene amplification, followed by tumor suppressor gene deletion and small variants located outside the coding region. In the remaining 9.0% of samples, no such signals were identified; therefore, further investigations are required. The current study clearly demonstrated the role and utility of WGS in identifying genomic alterations that contribute to tumorigenesis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.78e02debd67d4858aa07bf66640f5372
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-74272-0