27 research outputs found
Comprehensive and Integrated Genomic Characterization of Adult Soft Tissue Sarcomas
Summary
Sarcomas are a broad family of mesenchymal malignancies exhibiting remarkable histologic diversity. We describe the multi-platform molecular landscape of 206 adult soft tissue sarcomas representing 6 major types. Along with novel insights into the biology of individual sarcoma types, we report three overarching findings: (1) unlike most epithelial malignancies, these sarcomas (excepting synovial sarcoma) are characterized predominantly by copy-number changes, with low mutational loads and only a few genes (TP53, ATRX, RB1) highly recurrently mutated across sarcoma types; (2) within sarcoma types, genomic and regulomic diversity of driver pathways defines molecular subtypes associated with patient outcome; and (3) the immune microenvironment, inferred from DNA methylation and mRNA profiles, associates with outcome and may inform clinical trials of immune checkpoint inhibitors. Overall, this large-scale analysis reveals previously unappreciated sarcoma-type-specific changes in copy number, methylation, RNA, and protein, providing insights into refining sarcoma therapy and relationships to other cancer types
Comprehensive SNP Scan of DNA Repair and DNA Damage Response Genes Reveal Multiple Susceptibility Loci Conferring Risk to Tobacco Associated Leukoplakia and Oral Cancer
Polymorphic variants of DNA repair and damage response genes play major role in carcinogenesis. These variants are
suspected as predisposition factors to Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC). For identification of susceptible variants
affecting OSCC development in Indian population, the ‘‘maximally informative’’ method of SNP selection from HapMap data
to non-HapMap populations was applied. Three hundred twenty-five SNPs from 11 key genes involved in double strand
break repair, mismatch repair and DNA damage response pathways were genotyped on a total of 373 OSCC, 253
leukoplakia and 535 unrelated control individuals. The significantly associated SNPs were validated in an additional cohort
of 144 OSCC patients and 160 controls. The rs12515548 of MSH3 showed significant association with OSCC both in the
discovery and validation phases (discovery P-value: 1.43E-05, replication P-value: 4.84E-03). Two SNPs (rs12360870 of
MRE11A, P-value: 2.37E-07 and rs7003908 of PRKDC, P-value: 7.99E-05) were found to be significantly associated only with
leukoplakia. Stratification of subjects based on amount of tobacco consumption identified SNPs that were associated with
either high or low tobacco exposed group. The study reveals a synergism between associated SNPs and lifestyle factors in
predisposition to OSCC and leukoplakia