跳到主要导航 跳到搜索 跳到主要内容

Patterns of somatic structural variation in human cancer genomes

  • ,

科研成果: Article同行评审

611 引用 (Scopus)
1 下载量 (Pure)

摘要

A key mutational process in cancer is structural variation, in which rearrangements delete, amplify or reorder genomic segments that range in size from kilobases to whole chromosomes1–7. Here we develop methods to group, classify and describe somatic structural variants, using data from the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), which aggregated whole-genome sequencing data from 2,658 cancers across 38 tumour types8. Sixteen signatures of structural variation emerged. Deletions have a multimodal size distribution, assort unevenly across tumour types and patients, are enriched in late-replicating regions and correlate with inversions. Tandem duplications also have a multimodal size distribution, but are enriched in early-replicating regions—as are unbalanced translocations. Replication-based mechanisms of rearrangement generate varied chromosomal structures with low-level copy-number gains and frequent inverted rearrangements. One prominent structure consists of 2–7 templates copied from distinct regions of the genome strung together within one locus. Such cycles of templated insertions correlate with tandem duplications, and—in liver cancer—frequently activate the telomerase gene TERT. A wide variety of rearrangement processes are active in cancer, which generate complex configurations of the genome upon which selection can act.

源语言English
页(从-至)112-121
页数30
期刊Nature
578
7793
DOI
出版状态Published - 5 2月 2020

联合国可持续发展目标

此成果有助于实现下列可持续发展目标:

  1. Good health and well being
    Good health and well being

指纹

探究 'Patterns of somatic structural variation in human cancer genomes' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。

引用此