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Cancer-type specific aneuploidies hard-wire chromosome-wide gene expression patterns of their tissue of origin

Authors :
Rachel Adihe Lokanga
Jordi Camps
Annette Lischka
Yuri Lazebnik
Danny Wangsa
Cristina Montagna
Thomas Ried
B. Michael Ghadimi
Daniela Hirsch
Noam Auslander
Yue Hu
Michael J. Difilippantonio
Georg Emons
Darawalee Wangsa
Gert Auer
Jochen Gaedcke
Eytan Ruppin
Daniel Bronder
Sushant Patkar
Markus Brown
Wei Dong Chen
Kerstin Heselmeyer-Haddad
Jens K. Habermann
Marian Grade
Rüdiger Braun
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

SUMMARYMost carcinomas have characteristic chromosomal aneuploidies specific to the tissue of tumor origin. The reason for this specificity is unknown. As aneuploidies directly affect gene expression, we hypothesized that cancer-type specific aneuploidies, which emerge at early stages of tumor evolution, confer adaptive advantages to the physiological requirements of the tissue of origin. To test this hypothesis, we compared chromosomal aneuploidies reported in the TCGA database to chromosome arm-wide gene expression levels of normal tissues from the GTEx database. We find that cancer-type specific chromosomal aneuploidies mirror differential gene expression levels specific to the respective normal tissues which cannot be explained by copy number alterations of resident cancer driver genes. We propose that cancer-type specific aneuploidies “hard-wire” chromosome arm-wide gene expression levels present in normal tissues, favoring clonal expansion and tumorigenesis.One sentence summaryThe clonal evolution of cancer is initiated by tissue-specific transcriptional requirements

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c5d8e7da9d788ac0326cad84eec386d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/563858