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Candidate driver genes in microsatellite-unstable colorectal cancer
Authors:Alhopuro Pia  Sammalkorpi Heli  Niittymäki Iina  Biström Mia  Raitila Anniina  Saharinen Juha  Nousiainen Kari  Lehtonen Heli J  Heliövaara Elina  Puhakka Jani  Tuupanen Sari  Sousa Sónia  Seruca Raquel  Ferreira Ana M  Hofstra Robert M W  Mecklin Jukka-Pekka  Järvinen Heikki  Ristimäki Ari  Orntoft Torben F  Hautaniemi Sampsa  Arango Diego  Karhu Auli  Aaltonen Lauri A
Institution:Department of Medical Genetics, Genome-Scale Biology Research Program, Biomedicum Helsinki, University of Helsinki, Finland.
Abstract:Defects in the mismatch repair system lead to microsatellite instability (MSI), a feature observed in ~ 15% of all colorectal cancers (CRCs). Microsatellite mutations that drive tumourigenesis, typically inactivation of tumour suppressors, are selected for and are frequently detected in MSI cancers. Here, we evaluated somatic mutations in microsatellite repeats of 790 genes chosen based on reduced expression in MSI CRC and existence of a coding mononucleotide repeat of 6-10 bp in length. All the repeats were initially sequenced in 30 primary MSI CRC samples and whenever frameshift mutations were identified in >20%, additional 70 samples were sequenced. To distinguish driver mutations from passengers, we similarly analyzed the occurrence of frameshift mutations in 121 intronic control repeats and utilized a statistical regression model to determine cut-off mutation frequencies for repeats of all types (A/T and C/G, 6-10 bp). Along with several know target genes, including TGFBR2, ACVR2, and MSH3, six novel candidate driver genes emerged that harbored significantly more mutations than identical control repeats. The mutation frequencies in 100 MSI CRC samples were 51% in G8 of GLYR1, 47% in T9 of ABCC5, 43% in G8 of WDTC1, 33% in A8 of ROCK1, 30% in T8 of OR51E2, and 28% in A8 of TCEB3. Immunohistochemical staining of GLYR1 revealed defective protein expression in tumors carrying biallelic mutations, supporting a loss of function hypothesis. This is a large scale, unbiased effort to identify genes that when mutated are likely to contribute to MSI CRC development.
Keywords:microsatellite instability  colorectal cancer  frameshift mutation
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