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A genome-wide atlas of recurrent repeat expansions in human cancer

Authors :
Graham S. Erwin
Gamze Gürsoy
Rashid Al-Abri
Ashwini Suriyaprakash
Egor Dolzhenko
Kevin Zhu
Christian R. Hoerner
Shannon M. White
Lucia Ramirez
Ananya Vadlakonda
Alekhya Vadlakonda
Konor von Kraut
Julia Park
Charlotte M. Brannon
Daniel A. Sumano
Raushun A. Kirtikar
Alicia A. Erwin
Thomas J. Metzner
Ryan K. C. Yuen
Alice C. Fan
John T. Leppert
Michael A. Eberle
Mark Gerstein
Michael P. Snyder
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Expansion of a single repetitive DNA sequence, termed a tandem repeat (TR), is known to cause more than 50 diseases. However, repeat expansions are often not explored beyond neurological and neurodegenerative disorders. In some cancers, mutations accumulate in short tracts of TRs (STRs), a phenomenon termed microsatellite instability (MSI); however larger repeat expansions have not been systematically analyzed in cancer. Here, we identified TR expansions in 2,622 cancer genomes, spanning 29 cancer types. In 7 cancer types, we found 160 recurrent repeat expansions (rREs); most of these (155/160) were subtype specific. We found that rREs were non-uniformly distributed in the genome with an enrichment near candidate cis-regulatory elements, suggesting a role in gene regulation. One rRE located near a regulatory element in the first intron of UGT2B7 was detected in 34% of renal cell carcinoma samples and was validated by long-read DNA sequencing. Moreover, targeting cells harboring this rRE with a rationally designed, sequence-specific DNA binder led to a dose-dependent decrease in cell proliferation. Overall, our results demonstrate that rREs are an important but unexplored source of genetic variation in human cancers, and we provide a comprehensive catalog for further study.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b28dfefa141fa3a5614983f37cbddbe3