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result(s) for
"McBride, David J."
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The patterns and dynamics of genomic instability in metastatic pancreatic cancer
by
Iacobuzio-Donahue, Christine
,
Menzies, Andrew
,
Futreal, P. Andrew
in
631/208/211
,
631/208/69
,
631/67/322
2010
A timeline for pancreatic cancer
Christine Iacobuzio-Donahue and colleagues use whole-genome exome sequencing to analyse primary pancreatic cancers and one or more metastases from the same patients, and find that tumours are composed of distinct subclones. The authors also determine the evolutionary maps by which metastatic cancer clones have evolved within the primary tumour, and estimate the timescales of tumour progression. On the basis of these data, they estimate a mean period of 11.8 years between the initiation of pancreatic tumorigenesis and the formation of the parental, non-metastatic tumour, and a further 6.8 years for the index metastasis clone to arise. These data point to a potentially large window of opportunity during which it might be possible to detect the cancer in a relatively early form. Peter Campbell and colleagues use next-generation sequencing to detect chromosomal rearrangements in 13 patients with pancreatic cancer. The results reveal considerable inter-patient heterogeneity and indicate ongoing genomic instability and evolution during the development of metastases. But for most of the patients studied, more than half of the genetic rearrangements found were present in all metastases and the primary tumour, making them potential targets for therapeutic intervention at early and late stages of the disease.
Pancreatic cancer is highly aggressive, usually because of widespread metastasis. Here, next-generation DNA sequencing has been used to detect genomic rearrangements in 13 patients with pancreatic cancer and to explore clonal relationships among metastases. The results reveal not only considerable inter-patient heterogeneity, but also ongoing genomic instability and evolution during the development of metastases.
Pancreatic cancer is an aggressive malignancy with a five-year mortality of 97–98%, usually due to widespread metastatic disease. Previous studies indicate that this disease has a complex genomic landscape, with frequent copy number changes and point mutations
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
, but genomic rearrangements have not been characterized in detail. Despite the clinical importance of metastasis, there remain fundamental questions about the clonal structures of metastatic tumours
6
,
7
, including phylogenetic relationships among metastases, the scale of ongoing parallel evolution in metastatic and primary sites
7
, and how the tumour disseminates. Here we harness advances in DNA sequencing
8
,
9
,
10
,
11
,
12
to annotate genomic rearrangements in 13 patients with pancreatic cancer and explore clonal relationships among metastases. We find that pancreatic cancer acquires rearrangements indicative of telomere dysfunction and abnormal cell-cycle control, namely dysregulated G1-to-S-phase transition with intact G2–M checkpoint. These initiate amplification of cancer genes and occur predominantly in early cancer development rather than the later stages of the disease. Genomic instability frequently persists after cancer dissemination, resulting in ongoing, parallel and even convergent evolution among different metastases. We find evidence that there is genetic heterogeneity among metastasis-initiating cells, that seeding metastasis may require driver mutations beyond those required for primary tumours, and that phylogenetic trees across metastases show organ-specific branches. These data attest to the richness of genetic variation in cancer, brought about by the tandem forces of genomic instability and evolutionary selection.
Journal Article
DNaseI Hypersensitivity and Ultraconservation Reveal Novel, Interdependent Long-Range Enhancers at the Complex Pax6 Cis-Regulatory Region
2011
The PAX6 gene plays a crucial role in development of the eye, brain, olfactory system and endocrine pancreas. Consistent with its pleiotropic role the gene exhibits a complex developmental expression pattern which is subject to strict spatial, temporal and quantitative regulation. Control of expression depends on a large array of cis-elements residing in an extended genomic domain around the coding region of the gene. The minimal essential region required for proper regulation of this complex locus has been defined through analysis of human aniridia-associated breakpoints and YAC transgenic rescue studies of the mouse smalleye mutant. We have carried out a systematic DNase I hypersensitive site (HS) analysis across 200 kb of this critical region of mouse chromosome 2E3 to identify putative regulatory elements. Mapping the identified HSs onto a percent identity plot (PIP) shows many HSs correspond to recognisable genomic features such as evolutionarily conserved sequences, CpG islands and retrotransposon derived repeats. We then focussed on a region previously shown to contain essential long range cis-regulatory information, the Pax6 downstream regulatory region (DRR), allowing comparison of mouse HS data with previous human HS data for this region. Reporter transgenic mice for two of the HS sites, HS5 and HS6, show that they function as tissue specific regulatory elements. In addition we have characterised enhancer activity of an ultra-conserved cis-regulatory region located near Pax6, termed E60. All three cis-elements exhibit multiple spatio-temporal activities in the embryo that overlap between themselves and other elements in the locus. Using a deletion set of YAC reporter transgenic mice we demonstrate functional interdependence of the elements. Finally, we use the HS6 enhancer as a marker for the migration of precerebellar neuro-epithelium cells to the hindbrain precerebellar nuclei along the posterior and anterior extramural streams allowing visualisation of migratory defects in both pathways in Pax6(Sey/Sey) mice.
Journal Article
Detection of ctDNA in plasma of patients with clinically localised prostate cancer is associated with rapid disease progression
by
Corcoran, Niall M.
,
Ross, Mark T.
,
Kingsbury, Zoya
in
Bioinformatics
,
Biomarkers
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2020
Background
DNA originating from degenerate tumour cells can be detected in the circulation in many tumour types, where it can be used as a marker of disease burden as well as to monitor treatment response. Although circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) measurement has prognostic/predictive value in metastatic prostate cancer, its utility in localised disease is unknown.
Methods
We performed whole-genome sequencing of tumour-normal pairs in eight patients with clinically localised disease undergoing prostatectomy, identifying high confidence genomic aberrations. A bespoke DNA capture and amplification panel against the highest prevalence, highest confidence aberrations for each individual was designed and used to interrogate ctDNA isolated from plasma prospectively obtained pre- and post- (24 h and 6 weeks) surgery. In a separate cohort (
n
= 189), we identified the presence of ctDNA
TP53
mutations in preoperative plasma in a retrospective cohort and determined its association with biochemical- and metastasis-free survival.
Results
Tumour variants in ctDNA were positively identified pre-treatment in two of eight patients, which in both cases remained detectable postoperatively. Patients with tumour variants in ctDNA had extremely rapid disease recurrence and progression compared to those where variants could not be detected. In terms of aberrations targeted, single nucleotide and structural variants outperformed indels and copy number aberrations. Detection of ctDNA
TP53
mutations was associated with a significantly shorter metastasis-free survival (6.2 vs. 9.5 years (HR 2.4; 95% CIs 1.2–4.8,
p
= 0.014).
Conclusions
CtDNA is uncommonly detected in localised prostate cancer, but its presence portends more rapidly progressive disease.
Journal Article
A dedicated caller for DUX4 rearrangements from whole-genome sequencing data
by
Fielding, Claire
,
Armogida, Ivana
,
Moorman, Anthony V.
in
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
,
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
,
Acute lymphocytic leukemia
2025
Rearrangements involving the
DUX4
gene (
DUX4-
r) define a subtype of paediatric and adult acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) with a favourable outcome. Currently, there is no ‘standard of care’ diagnostic method for their confident identification. Here, we present an open-source software tool designed to detect
DUX4
-r from short-read, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data. Evaluation on a cohort of 210 paediatric ALL cases showed that our method detects all known, as well as previously unidentified, cases of
IGH::DUX4
and rearrangements with other partner genes. These findings demonstrate the possibility of robustly detecting
DUX4
-r using WGS in the routine clinical setting.
Journal Article
A phase II trial of mTORC1/2 inhibition in STK11 deficient non small cell lung cancer
by
Fletcher, Peter
,
Greystoke, Alastair
,
Cave, Judith
in
692/4028/67/1059/602
,
692/4028/67/1612/1350
,
Cancer Research
2025
There are no current stratified medicine options for STK11-deficient NSCLC. STK11 loss mediates mTORC activation, GLUT1 up-regulation and increased glycolysis. This metabolic reprogramming might represent a therapeutic vulnerability targetable with mTORC1/2 inhibition. In arm B2 of the National Lung Matrix Trial 54 patients with NSCLC received vistusertib, of which 49 were STK11-deficient (30 with
KRAS
mutation (B2D), 19 without (B2S)). Objective response (OR) and durable clinical benefit (DCB) rates with 95% credible intervals (CrI) were estimated from posterior probability distributions generated using Bayesian beta-binomial conjugate analysis. In B2D, 2 per-protocol patients obtained OR (estimated true OR rate (95%CrI) 9.8% (2.4–24.3). Estimates of true DCB rate (95%CrI): B2D 24.4% (11.1–42.3), B2S 14.6% (3.6–34.7). Overall, vistusertib cannot be recommended in this context. Longitudinal ctDNA analysis demonstrates enrichment of
SMARCA4
mutations post-treatment. In vitro studies show adaptive resistance to mTORC1/2 inhibition via AKT reactivation. (NCT02664935, ISRCTN38344105, EudraCT 2014-000814-73, 10 June 2015)
Journal Article
Whole-Genome Sequencing Can Identify Clinically Relevant Variants from a Single Sub-Punch of a Dried Blood Spot Specimen
by
Fielding, Claire
,
Ross, Mark T.
,
Fischl, Harry
in
Biotechnology industry
,
Cystic fibrosis
,
Data analysis
2023
The collection of dried blood spots (DBS) facilitates newborn screening for a variety of rare, but very serious conditions in healthcare systems around the world. Sub-punches of varying sizes (1.5–6 mm) can be taken from DBS specimens to use as inputs for a range of biochemical assays. Advances in DNA sequencing workflows allow whole-genome sequencing (WGS) libraries to be generated directly from inputs such as peripheral blood, saliva, and DBS. We compared WGS metrics obtained from libraries generated directly from DBS to those generated from DNA extracted from peripheral blood, the standard input for this type of assay. We explored the flexibility of DBS as an input for WGS by altering the punch number and size as inputs to the assay. We showed that WGS libraries can be successfully generated from a variety of DBS inputs, including a single 3 mm or 6 mm diameter punch, with equivalent data quality observed across a number of key metrics of importance in the detection of gene variants. We observed no difference in the performance of DBS and peripheral-blood-extracted DNA in the detection of likely pathogenic gene variants in samples taken from individuals with cystic fibrosis or phenylketonuria. WGS can be performed directly from DBS and is a powerful method for the rapid discovery of clinically relevant, disease-causing gene variants.
Journal Article
Systematic sequencing of renal carcinoma reveals inactivation of histone modifying genes
by
Teh, Bin Tean
,
Futreal, P. Andrew
,
Mulderrig, Lee
in
631/208/2489/68
,
631/208/514/1948
,
631/208/737
2010
Chromatin modification in renal carcinoma
A large survey for somatic mutations in clear cell renal cell carcinomas, the most common form of adult kidney cancer, shows that in addition to the known inactivating mutations in the
VHL
gene, recurrent mutations occur in the
NF2
gene, which encodes a tumour suppressor protein and in genes encoding the chromatin modifying enzymes SETD2, JARID1C and UTX.
Clear cell renal carcinoma, the most common form of adult kidney cancer, is often characterized by the presence of inactivating mutations in the
VHL
gene. A large survey for somatic mutations now identifies inactivating mutations in two genes encoding enzymes involved in histone modification, highlighting the role of mutations in components of the chromatin modification machinery in human cancer.
Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) is the most common form of adult kidney cancer, characterized by the presence of inactivating mutations in the
VHL
gene in most cases
1
,
2
, and by infrequent somatic mutations in known cancer genes. To determine further the genetics of ccRCC, we have sequenced 101 cases through 3,544 protein-coding genes. Here we report the identification of inactivating mutations in two genes encoding enzymes involved in histone modification—
SETD2
, a histone H3 lysine 36 methyltransferase, and
JARID1C
(also known as
KDM5C
), a histone H3 lysine 4 demethylase—as well as mutations in the histone H3 lysine 27 demethylase,
UTX
(
KMD6A
), that we recently reported
3
. The results highlight the role of mutations in components of the chromatin modification machinery in human cancer. Furthermore,
NF2
mutations were found in non-
VHL
mutated ccRCC, and several other probable cancer genes were identified. These results indicate that substantial genetic heterogeneity exists in a cancer type dominated by mutations in a single gene, and that systematic screens will be key to fully determining the somatic genetic architecture of cancer.
Journal Article
Whole exome sequencing of adenoid cystic carcinoma
by
Mitani, Yoshitsugu
,
Davies, Helen R.
,
Bignell, Graham R.
in
Biomedical research
,
Brief Report
,
Cancer
2013
Adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) is a rare malignancy that can occur in multiple organ sites and is primarily found in the salivary gland. While the identification of recurrent fusions of the MYB-NFIB genes have begun to shed light on the molecular underpinnings, little else is known about the molecular genetics of this frequently fatal cancer. We have undertaken exome sequencing in a series of 24 ACC to further delineate the genetics of the disease. We identified multiple mutated genes that, combined, implicate chromatin deregulation in half of cases. Further, mutations were identified in known cancer genes, including PIK3CA, ATM, CDKN2A, SF3B1, SUFU, TSC1, and CYLD. Mutations in NOTCH1/2 were identified in 3 cases, and we identify the negative NOTCH signaling regulator, SPEN, as a new cancer gene in ACC with mutations in 5 cases. Finally, the identification of 3 likely activating mutations in the tyrosine kinase receptor FGFR2, analogous to those reported in ovarian and endometrial carcinoma, point to potential therapeutic avenues for a subset of cases.
Journal Article
A small-cell lung cancer genome with complex signatures of tobacco exposure
by
Stebbings, Lucy
,
McKernan, Kevin J.
,
Davies, Helen R.
in
Binding sites
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Cancer
2010
Cancer is driven by mutation. Worldwide, tobacco smoking is the principal lifestyle exposure that causes cancer, exerting carcinogenicity through >60 chemicals that bind and mutate DNA. Using massively parallel sequencing technology, we sequenced a small-cell lung cancer cell line, NCI-H209, to explore the mutational burden associated with tobacco smoking. A total of 22,910 somatic substitutions were identified, including 134 in coding exons. Multiple mutation signatures testify to the cocktail of carcinogens in tobacco smoke and their proclivities for particular bases and surrounding sequence context. Effects of transcription-coupled repair and a second, more general, expression-linked repair pathway were evident. We identified a tandem duplication that duplicates exons 3–8 of
CHD7
in frame, and another two lines carrying
PVT1–CHD7
fusion genes, indicating that
CHD7
may be recurrently rearranged in this disease. These findings illustrate the potential for next-generation sequencing to provide unprecedented insights into mutational processes, cellular repair pathways and gene networks associated with cancer.
Cancer genomes compared
The two cancer genome sequences presented in this issue demonstrate how next-generation sequencing technologies can inform us about mutational processes, repair pathways and gene networks associated with cancer development. First, the genome of a cell line derived from a bone marrow metastasis in a patient who had small-cell lung cancer. This cancer is typical of the type induced by smoking, and the sequence contains mutation signatures characteristic of some of the more than 60 carcinogens present in tobacco smoke. The second paper compares the whole genome sequence of a melanoma cell line to a lymphoblastoid cell line from the same individual. This, the first complete mutational analysis of a solid tumour, reveals a dominant mutational signature reflecting DNA damage due to exposure to ultraviolet light.
Tobacco smoke contains more than sixty carcinogens that bind and mutate DNA. Here, massively parallel sequencing technology is used to sequence a small-cell lung cancer cell line, exploring the mutational burden associated with tobacco smoking. Multiple mutation signatures from the cocktail of carcinogens in tobacco smoke are found, as well as evidence of transcription-coupled repair and another, more general, expression-linked repair pathway.
Journal Article
Complex landscapes of somatic rearrangement in human breast cancer genomes
by
Silver, Daniel P.
,
Futreal, P. Andrew
,
Quail, Michael A.
in
Biological and medical sciences
,
Breast
,
Breast cancer
2009
Multiple somatic rearrangements are often found in cancer genomes; however, the underlying processes of rearrangement and their contribution to cancer development are poorly characterized. Here we use a paired-end sequencing strategy to identify somatic rearrangements in breast cancer genomes. There are more rearrangements in some breast cancers than previously appreciated. Rearrangements are more frequent over gene footprints and most are intrachromosomal. Multiple rearrangement architectures are present, but tandem duplications are particularly common in some cancers, perhaps reflecting a specific defect in DNA maintenance. Short overlapping sequences at most rearrangement junctions indicate that these have been mediated by non-homologous end-joining DNA repair, although varying sequence patterns indicate that multiple processes of this type are operative. Several expressed in-frame fusion genes were identified but none was recurrent. The study provides a new perspective on cancer genomes, highlighting the diversity of somatic rearrangements and their potential contribution to cancer development.
Breast cancer genomics
It has been known for decades that many tumours contain genomic rearrangements, but little is known about their causes and effects. Using new 'paired-end' sequencing technologies, Stephens
et al
. have now mapped the chromosome rearrangements in human breast cancers at high resolution. They find more rearrangements than previously recognized, most of them intrachromosomal rather than interchromosomal. Tandem duplications were remarkably common in some breast cancers but essentially absent from others, and may reflect a novel mutator phenotype.
Multiple somatic rearrangements are often found in cancer genomes, but the underlying processes of rearrangement and the effects of this are unclear. A paired-end sequencing strategy is now used to map somatic rearrangements in human breast cancer genomes. More rearrangements in some breast cancers are found than previously recognized, including frequent tandem duplications that may reflect a specific defect in DNA maintenance.
Journal Article