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이세민

Lee, Semin
Computational Biology Lab.
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A Pan-Cancer Compendium of Genes Deregulated by Somatic Genomic Rearrangement across More Than 1,400 Cases

Author(s)
Zhang, YiqunYang, LixingKucherlapati, MelanieChen, FengjuHadjipanayis, AngelaPantazi, AngelikiBristow, Christopher A.Lee, Eunjung A.Mahadeshwar, Harshad S.Tang, JiabinZhang, JianhuaSeth, SahilLee, SeminRen, XiaojiaSong, XingzhiSun, HuandongSeidman, JonathanLuquette, Lovelace J.Xi, RuibinChin, LyndaProtopopov, AlexeiLi, WeiPark, Peter J.Kucherlapati, RajuCreighton, Chad J.
Issued Date
2018-07
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2018.06.025
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/24423
Fulltext
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124718309203?via%3Dihub
Citation
CELL REPORTS, v.24, no.2, pp.515 - 527
Abstract
A systematic cataloging of genes affected by genomic rearrangement, using multiple patient cohorts and cancer types, can provide insight into cancer-relevant alterations outside of exomes. By integrative analysis of whole-genome sequencing (predominantly low pass) and gene expression data from 1,448 cancers involving 18 histopathological types in The Cancer Genome Atlas, we identified hundreds of genes for which the nearby presence (within 100 kb) of a somatic structural variant (SV) breakpoint is associated with altered expression. While genomic rearrangements are associated with widespread copy-number alteration (CNA) patterns, approximately 1,100 genes—including overexpressed cancer driver genes (e.g., TERT, ERBB2, CDK12, CDK4) and underexpressed tumor suppressors (e.g., TP53, RB1, PTEN, STK11)—show SV-associated deregulation independent of CNA. SVs associated with the disruption of topologically associated domains, enhancer hijacking, or fusion transcripts are implicated in gene upregulation. For cancer-relevant pathways, SVs considerably expand our understanding of how genes are affected beyond point mutation or CNA.
Publisher
CELL PRESS
ISSN
2211-1247

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