Transcriptional consequences of genomic structural aberrations in breast cancer
Author(s) -
Koichiro Inaki,
Axel M. Hillmer,
Leena Ukil,
Fei Yao,
Xing Yi Woo,
Leah A. Vardy,
Kelson Folkvard Braaten Zawack,
Charlie Wah Heng Lee,
Pramila Ariyaratne,
Yang Sun Chan,
Kartiki V. Desai,
Jonas Bergh,
Per Hall,
Thomas Choudary Putti,
Wai Loon Ong,
Atif Shahab,
Valère Cacheux-Rataboul,
R. Krishna Murthy Karuturi,
WingKin Sung,
Xiaoan Ruan,
Guillaume Bourque,
Yijun Ruan,
Edison T. Liu
Publication year - 2011
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.113225.110
Subject(s) - biology , gene duplication , tandem exon duplication , genome instability , fusion gene , gene , genetics , genome , breast cancer , gene dosage , copy number variation , gene rearrangement , cancer , computational biology , comparative genomic hybridization , gene expression , dna , dna damage
Using a long-span, paired-end deep sequencing strategy, we have comprehensively identified cancer genome rearrangements in eight breast cancer genomes. Herein, we show that 40%-54% of these structural genomic rearrangements result in different forms of fusion transcripts and that 44% are potentially translated. We find that single segmental tandem duplication spanning several genes is a major source of the fusion gene transcripts in both cell lines and primary tumors involving adjacent genes placed in the reverse-order position by the duplication event. Certain other structural mutations, however, tend to attenuate gene expression. From these candidate gene fusions, we have found a fusion transcript (RPS6KB1-VMP1) recurrently expressed in ∼30% of breast cancers associated with potential clinical consequences. This gene fusion is caused by tandem duplication on 17q23 and appears to be an indicator of local genomic instability altering the expression of oncogenic components such as MIR21 and RPS6KB1.
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