4.8 Article

The mutational landscapes of genetic and chemical models of Kras-driven lung cancer

Journal

NATURE
Volume 517, Issue 7535, Pages 489-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13898

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R01 CA111834, U01 CA84244, U01 CA141455, U01 CA176287]
  2. Bonnie Addario Foundation
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [T32 GM007175]
  4. National Science Foundation GRFP award
  5. NCI F31 NRSA award
  6. NIH [T32 GM007175]
  7. Cancer Research UK
  8. Wellcome Trust
  9. Cancer Research UK [13031] Funding Source: researchfish

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Next-generation sequencing of human tumours has refined our understanding of the mutational processes operative in cancer initiation and progression, yet major questions remain regarding the factors that induce driver mutations and the processes that shape mutation selection during tumorigenesis. Here we performed whole-exome sequencing on adenomas from three mouse models of non-small-cell lung cancer, which were induced either by exposure to carcinogens (methyl-nitrosourea (MNU) and urethane) or by genetic activation of Kras (Kras(LA2)). Although the MNU-induced tumours carried exactly the same initiating mutation in Kras as seen in the Kras(LA2) model (G12D), MNU tumours had an average of 192 non-synonymous, somatic single-nucleotide variants, compared with only six in tumours from the Kras(LA2) model. By contrast, the Kras(LA2) tumours exhibited a significantly higher level of aneuploidy and copy number alterations compared with the carcinogen-induced tumours, suggesting that carcinogen-induced and genetically engineered models lead to tumour development through different routes. The wild-type allele of Kras has been shown to act as a tumour suppressor inmouse models of non-small-cell lung cancer. We demonstrate that urethane-induced tumours from wild-type mice carry mostly (94%) Kras Q61R mutations, whereas those from Kras heterozygous animals carry mostly (92%) KrasQ61L mutations, indicating a major role for germ-line Kras status in mutation selection during initiation. The exome wide mutation spectra incarcinogen-induced tumours overwhelmingly display signatures of the initiating carcinogen, while adenocarcinomas acquire additional C > T mutations at CpG sites. These data provide a basis for understanding results from human tumour genome sequencing, which has identified two broad categories of tumours based on the relative frequency of single-nucleotide variations and copy number alterations(1), and underline the importance of carcinogen models for understanding the complex mutation spectra seen in human cancers.

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