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Discovery of non-ETS gene fusions in human prostate cancer using next-generation RNA sequencing
Author(s) -
Dorothee Pflueger,
Stéphane Terry,
Andrea Sboner,
Lukas Habegger,
Raquel Esgueva,
Pei-Chun Lin,
Maria A. Svensson,
Naoki Kitabayashi,
Benjamin J. Moss,
Theresa Y. MacDonald,
Xuhong Cao,
Terrence R. Barrette,
Ashutosh Tewari,
Mark S. Chee,
Arul M. Chinnaiyan,
David S. Rickman,
Francesca Demichelis,
Mark Gerstein,
Mark A. Rubin
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.110684.110
Subject(s) - biology , fusion gene , tmprss2 , prostate cancer , chromoplexy , carcinogenesis , transcriptome , gene , genetics , oncogene proteins , ets transcription factor family , computational biology , cancer , cancer research , regulation of gene expression , transcription factor , gene expression , pca3 , medicine , disease , covid-19 , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Half of prostate cancers harbor gene fusions between TMPRSS2 and members of the ETS transcription factor family. To date, little is known about the presence of non-ETS fusion events in prostate cancer. We used next-generation transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) in order to explore the whole transcriptome of 25 human prostate cancer samples for the presence of chimeric fusion transcripts. We generated more than 1 billion sequence reads and used a novel computational approach (FusionSeq) in order to identify novel gene fusion candidates with high confidence. In total, we discovered and characterized seven new cancer-specific gene fusions, two involving the ETS genes ETV1 and ERG , and four involving non-ETS genes such as CDKN1A (p21), CD9 , and IKBKB (IKK-beta), genes known to exhibit key biological roles in cellular homeostasis or assumed to be critical in tumorigenesis of other tumor entities, as well as the oncogene PIGU and the tumor suppressor gene RSRC2 . The novel gene fusions are found to be of low frequency, but, interestingly, the non-ETS fusions were all present in prostate cancer harboring the TMPRSS2–ERG gene fusion. Future work will focus on determining if the ETS rearrangements in prostate cancer are associated or directly predispose to a rearrangement-prone phenotype.

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