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Whole-Genome Sequencing Reveals Elevated Tumor Mutational Burden and Initiating Driver Mutations in African Men with Treatment-Naïve, High-Risk Prostate Cancer
- Source :
- Cancer research. 78(24)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- African-American men are more likely than any other racial group to die from prostate cancer. The contribution of acquired genomic variation to this racial disparity is largely unknown, as genomic from Africa is lacking. Here, we performed the first tumor-normal paired deep whole-genome sequencing for Africa. A direct study-matched comparison between African- and European-derived, treatment-naïve, high-risk prostate tumors for 15 cases allowed for further comparative analyses of existing data. Excluding a single hypermutated tumor with 55 mutations per megabase, we observed a 1.8-fold increase in small somatic variants in African- versus European-derived tumors (P = 1.02e–04), rising to 4-fold when compared with published tumor-matched data. Furthermore, we observed an increase in oncogenic driver mutations in African tumors (P = 2.92e–03); roughly 30% of impacted genes were novel to prostate cancer, and 79% of recurrent driver mutations appeared early in tumorigenesis. Although complex genomic rearrangements were less frequent in African tumors, we describe a uniquely hyperduplicated tumor affecting 149 transposable elements. Comparable with African Americans, ERG fusions and PIK3CA mutations were absent and PTEN loss less frequent. CCND1 and MYC were frequently gained, with somatic copy-number changes more likely to occur late in tumorigenesis. In addition to traditional prostate cancer gene pathways, genes regulating calcium ion-ATPase signal transduction were disrupted in African tumors. Although preliminary, our results suggest that further validation and investigation into the potential implications for elevated tumor mutational burden and tumor-initiating mutations in clinically unfavorable prostate cancer can improve patient outcomes in Africa. Significance: The first whole-genome sequencing study for high-risk prostate cancer in African men allows a simultaneous comparison of ethnic differences relative to European populations and of the influences of the environment relative to African-American men.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Oncology
Male
Cancer Research
medicine.medical_specialty
Carcinogenesis
DNA Mutational Analysis
Mutation, Missense
Black People
medicine.disease_cause
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
White People
03 medical and health sciences
Prostate cancer
South Africa
Germline mutation
Gene Frequency
Internal medicine
medicine
PTEN
Humans
Allele
Neoplasm Metastasis
Allele frequency
Alleles
Germ-Line Mutation
Phylogeny
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Gene Rearrangement
Mutation
biology
Whole Genome Sequencing
Genome, Human
Prostatic Neoplasms
Gene rearrangement
Health Status Disparities
medicine.disease
Europe
030104 developmental biology
Multigene Family
biology.protein
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15387445
- Volume :
- 78
- Issue :
- 24
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cancer research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7ab52b3745472ab6ff52ae3dc62e1340