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Data from Comparative Genomics Reveals Shared Mutational Landscape in Canine Hemangiosarcoma and Human Angiosarcoma

Authors :
Kerstin Lindblad-Toh
Ingegerd Elvers
Jaime F. Modiano
Matthew Breen
Elinor K. Karlsson
Rachael Thomas
Corrie Painter
Jessica Alfoldi
Noriko Tonomura
Luke Borst
Ashley J. Schulte
Milcah C. Scott
Mitzi Lewellen
Michele Koltookian
Jeremy Johnson
Sharadha Sakthikumar
Chao Wang
Aaron L. Sarver
Jong-Hyuk Kim
Ross Swofford
Jason Turner-Maier
Kate Megquier
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Angiosarcoma is a highly aggressive cancer of blood vessel–forming cells with few effective treatment options and high patient mortality. It is both rare and heterogenous, making large, well-powered genomic studies nearly impossible. Dogs commonly suffer from a similar cancer, called hemangiosarcoma, with breeds like the golden retriever carrying heritable genetic factors that put them at high risk. If the clinical similarity of canine hemangiosarcoma and human angiosarcoma reflects shared genomic etiology, dogs could be a critically needed model for advancing angiosarcoma research. We assessed the genomic landscape of canine hemangiosarcoma via whole-exome sequencing (47 golden retriever hemangiosarcomas) and RNA sequencing (74 hemangiosarcomas from multiple breeds). Somatic coding mutations occurred most frequently in the tumor suppressor TP53 (59.6% of cases) as well as two genes in the PI3K pathway: the oncogene PIK3CA (29.8%) and its regulatory subunit PIK3R1 (8.5%). The predominant mutational signature was the age-associated deamination of cytosine to thymine. As reported in human angiosarcoma, CDKN2A/B was recurrently deleted and VEGFA, KDR, and KIT recurrently gained. We compared the canine data to human data recently released by The Angiosarcoma Project, and found many of the same genes and pathways significantly enriched for somatic mutations, particularly in breast and visceral angiosarcomas. Canine hemangiosarcoma closely models the genomic landscape of human angiosarcoma of the breast and viscera, and is a powerful tool for investigating the pathogenesis of this devastating disease.Implications:We characterize the genomic landscape of canine hemangiosarcoma and demonstrate its similarity to human angiosarcoma.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f0229b663319dc1dc3ceeea0bd2c1725
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.c.6541095