Pan-cancer analysis of whole genomes

被引:0
|
作者
机构
[1] Applied Tumor Genomics Research Program,Genome Science Division, Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology
[2] Research Programs Unit,Department of Surgery
[3] University of Helsinki,Department of Surgery, Division of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, School of Medicine
[4] Wellcome Sanger Institute,Department of Oncology, Gil Medical Center
[5] Wellcome Genome Campus,Department of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
[6] Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center,Bioinformatics Core Facility
[7] University of Tokyo,Heinrich Pette Institute
[8] University of Chicago,Ontario Tumour Bank
[9] Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center,Department of Pathology
[10] Gachon University,Laboratory of Pathology, Center for Cancer Research
[11] Hiroshima University,Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine and Department of Bioengineering
[12] The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre
[13] University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,Centre for Research in Molecular Medicine and Chronic Diseases (CiMUS)
[14] King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre,Department of Zoology, Genetics and Physical Anthropology
[15] Al Maather,The Biomedical Research Centre (CINBIO)
[16] Bioinformatics Unit,Department of Genomic Medicine
[17] Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO),Quantitative and Computational Biosciences Graduate Program
[18] University Medical Center Hamburg,Genome Informatics Program
[19] Leibniz Institute for Experimental Virology,Institute of Human Genetics
[20] Ontario Institute for Cancer Research,Institute of Human Genetics
[21] The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,Queensland Centre for Medical Genomics, Institute for Molecular Bioscience
[22] National Cancer Institute,Department of Surgery, Pancreas Institute
[23] University of California San Diego,Molecular and Medical Genetics, OHSU Knight Cancer Institute
[24] UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center,Department of Molecular Oncology
[25] Canada’s Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre,Division of Cancer Genomics
[26] BC Cancer,Center for Molecular Oncology
[27] University of Melbourne,Department of Pathology
[28] Universidade de Santiago de Compostela,Epigenomics and Cancer Risk Factors
[29] (CiMUS),Computational Biology Program
[30] Universidade de Santiago de Compostela,Department of Molecular Genetics
[31] Universidade de Vigo,Hematopathology Section, Institute of Pathology
[32] Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital - Bolsover,Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine
[33] The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,Department of Cancer Genetics, Institute for Cancer Research
[34] Baylor College of Medicine,Pathology, Hospital Clinic, Institut d’Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS)
[35] The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine,Department of Veterinary Medicine
[36] Ontario Institute for Cancer Research,Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center
[37] Christian-Albrechts-University,Wolfson Wohl Cancer Research Centre, Institute of Cancer Sciences
[38] Ulm University and Ulm University Medical Center,Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center
[39] University of Queensland,Department of Pediatrics
[40] St. Lucia,Leeds Institute of Medical Research @ St. James’s
[41] Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust,Department of Pathology and Diagnostics
[42] University and Hospital Trust of Verona,Department of Surgery
[43] Oregon Health and Science University,Surgical Oncology Group, Diamantina Institute
[44] BC Cancer Research Centre,Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences
[45] The McDonnell Genome Institute at Washington University,Research Health Analytics and Informatics
[46] University College London,European Molecular Biology Laboratory
[47] National Cancer Center Research Institute,Arnie Charbonneau Cancer Institute
[48] National Cancer Center,Departments of Surgery and Oncology
[49] DLR Project Management Agency,Department of Pathology
[50] Tokyo Women’s Medical University,PanCuRx Translational Research Initiative
来源
Nature | 2020年 / 578卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Cancer is driven by genetic change, and the advent of massively parallel sequencing has enabled systematic documentation of this variation at the whole-genome scale1–3. Here we report the integrative analysis of 2,658 whole-cancer genomes and their matching normal tissues across 38 tumour types from the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). We describe the generation of the PCAWG resource, facilitated by international data sharing using compute clouds. On average, cancer genomes contained 4–5 driver mutations when combining coding and non-coding genomic elements; however, in around 5% of cases no drivers were identified, suggesting that cancer driver discovery is not yet complete. Chromothripsis, in which many clustered structural variants arise in a single catastrophic event, is frequently an early event in tumour evolution; in acral melanoma, for example, these events precede most somatic point mutations and affect several cancer-associated genes simultaneously. Cancers with abnormal telomere maintenance often originate from tissues with low replicative activity and show several mechanisms of preventing telomere attrition to critical levels. Common and rare germline variants affect patterns of somatic mutation, including point mutations, structural variants and somatic retrotransposition. A collection of papers from the PCAWG Consortium describes non-coding mutations that drive cancer beyond those in the TERT promoter4; identifies new signatures of mutational processes that cause base substitutions, small insertions and deletions and structural variation5,6; analyses timings and patterns of tumour evolution7; describes the diverse transcriptional consequences of somatic mutation on splicing, expression levels, fusion genes and promoter activity8,9; and evaluates a range of more-specialized features of cancer genomes8,10–18.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:82 / 93
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Systematic pan-cancer analysis of tumour purity
    Dvir Aran
    Marina Sirota
    Atul J. Butte
    Nature Communications, 6
  • [32] Pan-Cancer Analysis of Prognostic Metastatic Phenotypes
    Zaorsky, N. G.
    Wang, X.
    Lehrer, E. J.
    Lin, C.
    Garrett, S. M.
    Zhang, Y.
    DeGraff, D.
    Spratt, D. E.
    Trifiletti, D. M.
    Kishan, A. U.
    Showalter, T. N.
    Park, H. S. M.
    Yang, J. T.
    Wang, M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2021, 111 (03): : S64 - S64
  • [33] Pan-cancer analysis of the metabolic reaction network
    Gatto, Francesco
    Ferreira, Raphael
    Nielsen, Jens
    METABOLIC ENGINEERING, 2020, 57 : 51 - 62
  • [34] Pan-cancer analysis of the deoxyribonuclease gene family
    Bai, Qingquan
    He, Xiao
    Hu, Tianhui
    MOLECULAR AND CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2023, 18 (03)
  • [35] A COMPREHENSIVE PAN-CANCER ANALYSIS OF CHILDHOOD MALIGNANCIES
    Groebner, Susanne N.
    Worst, Barbara
    Jones, David T. W.
    Buchhalter, Ivo
    Kleinheinz, Kortine
    Weischenfeldt, Joachim
    Johann, Pascal D.
    Segura-Wang, Maia
    Northcott, Paul A.
    Kool, Marcel
    Hutter, Barbara
    Bender, Sebastian
    Korbel, Jan O.
    Schlesner, Matthias
    Chavez, Lukas
    Zapatka, Marc
    Lichter, Peter
    Pfister, Stefan M.
    NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2016, 18 : 171 - 172
  • [36] Pan-cancer analysis for oncogenes and mechanisms of their upregulation
    Dmitriev, A. A.
    Krasnov, G. S.
    Melnikova, N. V.
    Pushkova, E. N.
    Novakovskiy, R. O.
    Kudryavtseva, A. V.
    Beniaminov, A. D.
    ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2019, 30
  • [37] Proteogenomic data and resources for pan-cancer analysis
    Li, Yize
    Dou, Yongchao
    Leprevost, Felipe Da Veiga
    Geffen, Yifat
    Calinawan, Anna P.
    Akiyama, Yo
    Anand, Shankara
    Birger, Chet
    Cao, Song
    Chaudhary, Rekha
    Chilappagari, Padmini
    Cieslik, Marcin
    Colaprico, Antonio
    Zhou, Daniel Cui
    Day, Corbin
    Domagalski, Marcin J.
    Aguet, Francois
    Fenyo, David
    Selvan, Myvizhi Esai
    Foltz, Steven M.
    Francis, Alicia
    Gonzalez-Robles, Tania
    Euromueuros, Zeynep H.
    Heiman, David
    Holck, Michael
    Hong, Runyu
    Hu, Yingwei
    Jaehnig, Eric J.
    Ji, Jiayi
    Jiang, Wen
    Katsnelson, Lizabeth
    Ketchum, Karen A.
    Klein, Robert J.
    Lei, Jonathan T.
    Liang, Wen-Wei
    Liao, Yuxing
    Lindgren, Caleb M.
    Ma, Weiping
    Ma, Lei
    Maccoss, Michael J.
    Rodrigues, Fernanda Martins
    Mckerrow, Wilson
    Nguyen, Ngoc
    Oldroyd, Robert
    Pilozzi, Alexander
    Pugliese, Pietro
    Reva, Boris
    Rudnick, Paul
    Ruggles, Kelly V.
    Rykunov, Dmitry
    CANCER CELL, 2023, 41 (08) : 1397 - 1406
  • [38] Integrative analysis the characterization of peroxiredoxins in pan-cancer
    Lei Gao
    Jialin Meng
    Chuang Yue
    Xingyu Wu
    Quanxin Su
    Hao Wu
    Ze Zhang
    Qinzhou Yu
    Shenglin Gao
    Song Fan
    Li Zuo
    Cancer Cell International, 21
  • [39] Homologous recombination deficiency score of pan-cancer analysis using whole-exon sequencing
    Naruoka, Akane
    Serizawa, Masakuni
    Horiuchi, Yasue
    Nagashima, Takeshi
    Ohshima, Keiichi
    Hatakeyama, Keiichi
    Ohnami, Sumiko
    Ohnami, Shumpei
    Urakami, Kenichi
    Akiyama, Yasuto
    Yamaguchi, Ken
    CANCER SCIENCE, 2023, 114 : 1776 - 1776
  • [40] Systematic pan-cancer analysis of tumour purity
    Aran, Dvir
    Sirota, Marina
    Butte, Atul J.
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2015, 6