4.5 Article

Splice-disrupt genomic variants in prostate cancer

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTS
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 4237-4246

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11033-022-07257-9

Keywords

Genomic mutation; Prostate cancer; Systems biology; Splicing; Variant discovery

Funding

  1. Nectar Research Cloud, a collaborative Australian research platform - Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC)
  2. National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)
  3. Pawsey Supercomputing Centre
  4. Australian Government
  5. Government of Western Australia

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This study profiles splice-disrupt genomic variants and their target genes in different types of prostate cancer, revealing important cancer-associated functions. The findings suggest that these variants could serve as potential diagnostic and prognostic markers for prostate cancer progression and metastasis.
Background Splice-disrupt genomic variants are one of the causes of cancer-causing errors in gene expression. Little is known about splice-disrupt genomic variants. Methods and results Here, pattern of splice-disrupt variants was investigated using 21,842,764 genomic variants in different types of prostate cancer. A particular attention was paid to genomic locations of splice-disrupt variants on target genes. HLA-A in prostate cancer, MSR1 in familial prostate cancer, and EGFR in both castration-resistant prostate cancer and metastatic castration-resistant had the highest allele frequencies of splice-disrupt variations. Some splice-disrupt variants, located on coding sequences of NCOR2, PTPRC, and CRP, were solely present in the advanced metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. High-risk splice-disrupt variants were identified based on computationally calculated Polymorphism Phenotyping (PolyPhen), Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant (SIFT), and Genomic Evolutionary Rate Profiling (GERP) + + scores as well as the recorded clinical significance in dbSNP database of NCBI. Functional annotation of damaging splice-disrupt variants highlighted important cancer-associated functions, including endocrine resistance, lipid metabolic process, steroid metabolic process, regulation of mitotic cell cycle, and regulation of metabolic process. This is the first study that profiles the splice-disrupt genomic variants and their target genes in prostate cancer. Literature mining based variant analysis highlighted the importance of rs1800716 variant, located on the CYP2D6 gene, involved in a range of important functions, such as RNA spicing, drug interaction, death, and urotoxicity. Conclusions This is the first study that profiles the splice-disrupt genomic variants and their target genes in different types of prostate cancer. Unravelling alternative splicing opens a new avenue towards the establishment of new diagnostic and prognostic markers for prostate cancer progression and metastasis.

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