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Analyses of non-coding somatic drivers in 2,658 cancer whole genomes.

Authors :
Rheinbay E
Nielsen MM
Abascal F
Wala JA
Shapira O
Tiao G
Hornshøj H
Hess JM
Juul RI
Lin Z
Feuerbach L
Sabarinathan R
Madsen T
Kim J
Mularoni L
Shuai S
Lanzós A
Herrmann C
Maruvka YE
Shen C
Amin SB
Bandopadhayay P
Bertl J
Boroevich KA
Busanovich J
Carlevaro-Fita J
Chakravarty D
Chan CWY
Craft D
Dhingra P
Diamanti K
Fonseca NA
Gonzalez-Perez A
Guo Q
Hamilton MP
Haradhvala NJ
Hong C
Isaev K
Johnson TA
Juul M
Kahles A
Kahraman A
Kim Y
Komorowski J
Kumar K
Kumar S
Lee D
Lehmann KV
Li Y
Liu EM
Lochovsky L
Park K
Pich O
Roberts ND
Saksena G
Schumacher SE
Sidiropoulos N
Sieverling L
Sinnott-Armstrong N
Stewart C
Tamborero D
Tubio JMC
Umer HM
Uusküla-Reimand L
Wadelius C
Wadi L
Yao X
Zhang CZ
Zhang J
Haber JE
Hobolth A
Imielinski M
Kellis M
Lawrence MS
von Mering C
Nakagawa H
Raphael BJ
Rubin MA
Sander C
Stein LD
Stuart JM
Tsunoda T
Wheeler DA
Johnson R
Reimand J
Gerstein M
Khurana E
Campbell PJ
López-Bigas N
Weischenfeldt J
Beroukhim R
Martincorena I
Pedersen JS
Getz G
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2020 Feb; Vol. 578 (7793), pp. 102-111. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Feb 05.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The discovery of drivers of cancer has traditionally focused on protein-coding genes <superscript>1-4</superscript> . Here we present analyses of driver point mutations and structural variants in non-coding regions across 2,658 genomes from the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium <superscript>5</superscript> of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). For point mutations, we developed a statistically rigorous strategy for combining significance levels from multiple methods of driver discovery that overcomes the limitations of individual methods. For structural variants, we present two methods of driver discovery, and identify regions that are significantly affected by recurrent breakpoints and recurrent somatic juxtapositions. Our analyses confirm previously reported drivers <superscript>6,7</superscript> , raise doubts about others and identify novel candidates, including point mutations in the 5' region of TP53, in the 3' untranslated regions of NFKBIZ and TOB1, focal deletions in BRD4 and rearrangements in the loci of AKR1C genes. We show that although point mutations and structural variants that drive cancer are less frequent in non-coding genes and regulatory sequences than in protein-coding genes, additional examples of these drivers will be found as more cancer genomes become available.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
578
Issue :
7793
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32025015
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-1965-x