whole genome doubling
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Vanessa Bernhard ◽  
Katarzyna Seget-Trzensiok ◽  
Christian Kuffer ◽  
Dragomir B. Krastev ◽  
Lisa-Marie Stautmeister ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Whole genome doubling is a frequent event during cancer evolution and shapes the cancer genome due to the occurrence of chromosomal instability. Yet, erroneously arising human tetraploid cells usually do not proliferate due to p53 activation that leads to CDKN1A expression, cell cycle arrest, senescence and/or apoptosis. Methods To uncover the barriers that block the proliferation of tetraploids, we performed a RNAi mediated genome-wide screen in a human colorectal cancer cell line (HCT116). Results We identified 140 genes whose depletion improved the survival of tetraploid cells and characterized in depth two of them: SPINT2 and USP28. We found that SPINT2 is a general regulator of CDKN1A transcription via histone acetylation. Using mass spectrometry and immunoprecipitation, we found that USP28 interacts with NuMA1 and affects centrosome clustering. Tetraploid cells accumulate DNA damage and loss of USP28 reduces checkpoint activation, thus facilitating their proliferation. Conclusions Our results indicate three aspects that contribute to the survival of tetraploid cells: (i) increased mitogenic signaling and reduced expression of cell cycle inhibitors, (ii) the ability to establish functional bipolar spindles and (iii) reduced DNA damage signaling.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wentao Fang ◽  
Chia-Hsin Wu ◽  
Qiang-Ling Sun ◽  
Zhi-Tao Gu ◽  
Lei Zhu ◽  
...  

Thymic carcinoma (TC) is the most aggressive thymic epithelial neoplasm. TC patients with microsatellite instability, whole-genome doubling, or alternative tumor-specific antigens from gene fusion are most likely to benefit from immunotherapies. However, due to the rarity of this disease, how to prioritize the putative biomarkers and what constitutes an optimal treatment regimen remains largely unknown. Therefore, we integrated genomic and transcriptomic analyses from TC patients and revealed that frameshift indels in KMT2C and CYLD frequently produce neoantigens. Moreover, a median of 3 fusion-derived neoantigens was predicted across affected patients, especially the CATSPERB-TC2N neoantigens that were recurrently predicted in TC patients. Lastly, potentially actionable alterations with early levels of evidence were uncovered and could be used for designing clinical trials. In summary, this study shed light on our understanding of tumorigenesis and presented new avenues for molecular characterization and immunotherapy in TC.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin A. Nacev ◽  
Francisco Sanchez-Vega ◽  
Shaleigh A. Smith ◽  
Cristina R. Antonescu ◽  
Evan Rosenbaum ◽  
...  

The genetic, biologic, and clinical heterogeneity of sarcomas poses a challenge for the identification of therapeutic targets, clinical research, and advancing patient care. Because there are > 100 sarcoma subtypes, in-depth genetic studies have focused on one or a few subtypes. Herein, we report a comparative genetic analyses analysis of 2,138 sarcomas representing 45 pathological entities. This cohort was prospectively analyzed using targeted sequencing to characterize subtype-specific somatic alterations in targetable pathways, rates of whole genome doubling, mutational signatures, and subtype-agnostic genomic clusters. The most common alterations were in cell cycle control and TP53, receptor tyrosine kinases/PI3K/RAS, and epigenetic regulators. Subtype-specific associations included TERT amplification in intimal sarcoma and SWI/SNF alterations in uterine adenosarcoma. Tumor mutational burden, while low compared to other cancers, varied between and within subtypes. This resource will improve sarcoma models, motivate studies of subtype-specific alterations, and inform investigations of genetic factors and their correlations with treatment response.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maik Kschischo ◽  
Xiaoxiao Zhang

A large proportion of tumours is characterised by numerical or structural chromosomal instability (CIN), defined as an increased rate of gaining or losing whole chromosomes (W-CIN) or of accumulating structural aberrations (S-CIN). Both W-CIN and S-CIN are associated with tumourigenesis, cancer progression, treatment resistance and clinical outcome. Although S-CIN and W-CIN can co-occur, they are initiated by different molecular events. By analysing tumour genomic data from 32 cancer types, we show that the majority of tumours with high levels of W-CIN underwent whole genome doubling, whereas S-CIN levels are strongly associated to homologous recombination deficiency. Both CIN phenotypes are prognostic in several cancer types. Most drugs are less efficient in high CIN cell lines, but we report also compounds and drugs which could specifically target S-CIN or W-CIN. By analysing associations of gene expression with CIN at the pathway and single gene level, we complement gene signatures for CIN and report that the drug resistance gene CKS1B is strongly associated to both S-CIN and W-CIN. Finally, we identify a potential copy number dependent mechanism for the activation of the PI3K pathway in high CIN tumours.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chia-Hsin Wu ◽  
Chia-Shan Hsieh ◽  
Yo-Cheng Chang ◽  
Chi-Cheng Huang ◽  
Hsien-Tang Yeh ◽  
...  

AbstractWhole-genome doubling (WGD) is an early macro-evolutionary event in tumorigenesis, involving the doubling of an entire chromosome complement. However, its impact on breast cancer subtypes remains unclear. Here, we performed a comprehensive and quantitative analysis of WGD and its influence on breast cancer subtypes in patients from Taiwan and consequently highlight the genomic association between WGD and homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). A higher manifestation of WGD was reported in triple-negative breast cancer, conferring high chromosomal instability (CIN), while HER2 + tumors exhibited early WGD events, with widely varied CIN levels, compared to luminal-type tumors. An association of higher activity of de novo indel signature 2 with WGD and HRD in Taiwanese breast cancer patients was reported. A control test between WGD and pseudo non-WGD samples was further employed to support this finding. The study provides a better comprehension of tumorigenesis in breast cancer subtypes, thus assisting in personalized treatment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Raul Caso ◽  
James G. Connolly ◽  
Jian Zhou ◽  
Kay See Tan ◽  
James J. Choi ◽  
...  

AbstractWhile next-generation sequencing (NGS) is used to guide therapy in patients with metastatic lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), use of NGS to determine pathologic LN metastasis prior to surgery has not been assessed. To bridge this knowledge gap, we performed NGS using MSK-IMPACT in 426 treatment-naive patients with clinical N2-negative LUAD. A multivariable logistic regression model that considered preoperative clinical and genomic variables was constructed. Most patients had cN0 disease (85%) with pN0, pN1, and pN2 rates of 80%, 11%, and 9%, respectively. Genes altered at higher rates in pN-positive than in pN-negative tumors were STK11 (p = 0.024), SMARCA4 (p = 0.006), and SMAD4 (p = 0.011). Fraction of genome altered (p = 0.037), copy number amplifications (p = 0.001), and whole-genome doubling (p = 0.028) were higher in pN-positive tumors. Multivariable analysis revealed solid tumor morphology, tumor SUVmax, clinical stage, SMARCA4 and SMAD4 alterations were independently associated with pathologic LN metastasis. Incorporation of clinical and tumor genomic features can identify patients at risk of pathologic LN metastasis; this may guide therapy decisions before surgical resection.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 20200059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Zhang ◽  
Zhe Yu ◽  
Chunfang Zheng ◽  
David Sankoff

Whole-genome doubling, tripling or replicating to a greater degree, due to fixation of polyploidization events, is attested in almost all lineages of the flowering plants, recurring in the ancestry of some plants two, three or more times in retracing their history to the earliest angiosperm. This major mechanism in plant genome evolution, which generally appears as instantaneous on the evolutionary time scale, sets in operation a compensatory process called fractionation, the loss of duplicate genes, initially rapid, but continuing at a diminishing rate over millions and tens of millions of years. We study this process by statistically comparing the distribution of duplicate gene pairs as a function of their time of creation through polyploidization, as measured by sequence similarity. The stochastic model that accounts for this distribution, though exceedingly simple, still has too many parameters to be estimated based only on the similarity distribution, while the computational procedures for compiling the distribution from annotated genomic data is heavily biased against earlier polyploidization events—syntenic ‘crumble’. Other parameters, such as the size of the initial gene complement and the ploidy of the various events giving rise to duplicate gene pairs, are even more inaccessible to estimation. Here, we show how the frequency of unpaired genes, identified via their embedding in stretches of duplicate pairs, together with previously established constraints among some parameters, adds enormously to the range of successive polyploidization events that can be analysed. This also allows us to estimate the initial gene complement and to correct for the bias due to crumble. We explore the applicability of our methodology to four flowering plant genomes covering a range of different polyploidization histories.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e22517-e22517
Author(s):  
Xiaopei Chao ◽  
Wendy Wu ◽  
Lei Li ◽  
Hui Li ◽  
Zhenzhen Li

e22517 Background: Uterine adenomyosis is a benign condition in which endometrium-like epithelial and stromal tissue appear in the myometrium, but easily concurrent with uterine cancer and other diseases. To date, few investigations have explored the molecular mechanism of adenomyosis. This research is the first report that found the association between chromosomal instability and pathogenesis in adenomyosis. Methods: Whole exome (̃39Mb CDS of over 18,000 genes; WES) and RNA sequencing were conducted on a total of 57 adenomyosis patients enrolled in this study from 2018 to 2020, including 57 normal endometrium (EN), 57 adenomyosis (AM) and 11 endometrioses (EMT) samples. Genomic test results including somatic SNVs and CNVs as well as the whole genome duplication status were determined, which were all analyzed correlated with clinical factors. Results: We identified the presence of whole genome doubling event in 19 specimens from 16 adenomyosis patients (grouped as WGD, the other 41 patients grouped as noWGD), related to 7 normal endometrium (EN), 9 adenomyosis (AM) and 3 endometriosis (EMT) samples, which was significant with p value of 4.5e-12 by means of Wilcoxon rank sum test. Disease Free Survival (DFS) of WGD patients was significantly shorter than noWGD patients (Wilcoxon rank sum test: P = 2.42e-04), which indicated that WGD group has early on-set in adenomyosis. Estrogen therapy was applied to 31 patients before uterectomy (11 in WGD group and 20 in noWGD group), and the effectiveness of the treatment was significantly higher in WGD patients (Fisher’s exact test: P = 0.02). We found that one third adenomyosis performed whole genome doubling events, which leaded to the early on-set of this disease and significantly sensitive to estrogen therapy. Cellular stressors are extensive correlated with the generation of polyploid cells in a diploid organism form by cell proliferation progress. Compared with the normal and energy-intensive cell differentiation process, cell proliferation offers a “fast but cheap” solution under stress. Our results suggested that when cell differentiation in uterine could not be carried out properly, cell proliferation would have performed instead and produced more polyploid cells, shown as whole genome doubling events. While this circumstance would have been relieved when easing the metabolic stress with estrogen treatment. Conclusions: Our results explored the strong association between chromosomal instability and pathogenesis of adenomyosis and assumed that polyploidy caused by abnormal cell proliferation might be the molecular mechanism of uterine adenomyosis. More accurate verdict could be concluded through larger scale cohort study.


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