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Whole-Genome Sequencing Reveals Mutational Signatures Related to Radiation-Induced Sarcomas and DNA-Damage-Repair Pathways

Cited 3 time in Web of Science Cited 4 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Eunji; Han, Dong-Jin; Kim, Byoung Hyuck; Yoo, Jinseon; Kim, Hak Jae; Wu, Hong-Gyun; Kim, Kyung Su; Kim, Han-Soo; Han, Ilkyu; Moon, Kyung Chul; Park, Jeong Hwan; Song, Sanghyuk; Kim, Tae-Min; Chang, Ji Hyun

Issue Date
2023-01
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Modern Pathology, Vol.36 No.1, p. 100004
Abstract
Radiation-induced sarcoma (RIS) is a rare but serious late complication arising from radiotherapy. Despite unfavorable clinical outcomes, the genomic footprints of ionizing radiation in RIS development remain largely unknown. Hence, this study aimed to characterize RIS genomes and the genomic alterations in them. We analyzed whole-genome sequencing in 11 RIS genomes matched with normal genomes to identify somatic alterations potentially associated with RIS development. Furthermore, the abundance of mutations, mutation signatures, and structural variants in RIS were compared with those in radiation-naïve spontaneous sarcomas. The mutation abundance in RIS genomes, including one hypermutated genome, was variable. Cancer-related genes might show different types of genomic alterations. For instance, NF1, NF2, NOTCH1, NOTCH2, PIK3CA, RB1, and TP53 showed singleton somatic mutations; MYC, CDKN2A, RB1, and NF1 showed recurrent copy number alterations; and NF2, ARID1B, and RAD51B showed recurrent structural variations. The genomic footprints of nonhomologous end joining are prevalent at indels of RIS genomes compared with those in spontaneous sarcoma genomes, representing the genomic hallmark of RIS genomes. In addition, frequent chromothripsis was identified along with predisposing germline variants in the DNA-damage-repair pathways in RIS genomes. The characterization of RIS genomes on a whole-genome sequencing scale highlighted that the nonhomologous end joining pathway was associated with tumorigenesis, and it might pave the way for the development of advanced diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for RIS.
ISSN
0893-3952
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201643
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.modpat.2022.100004
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Kim, Byoung hyuck김병혁
(기금)조교수
  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area 소화기암, 육종, 폐암

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