4.7 Article

Variant Enrichment Analysis to Explore Pathways Disruption in a Necropsy Series of Asbestos-Exposed Shipyard Workers

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232113628

Keywords

asbestos; mesothelioma; lung cancer; whole exome; FFPE (fixed in formalin and embedded in paraffin); variant enrichment analysis (VEA)

Funding

  1. Italian League for the Fight Against Cancer (LILT)
  2. ASSOCIAZIONE ISONTINA LILT (Bando di Ricerca sanitaria 2017-programma 5 per mille anno 2015)
  3. Municipality of Monfalcone (Gorizia)
  4. Regione Autonoma Friuli-Venezia Giulia
  5. Assessorato alla Salute e Protezione Sociale [1299, 1124/SPS, 09/20/2016]
  6. Institute for Maternal and Child Health IRCCS Burlo Garofolo/Italian Ministry of Health (BioHub) [03/20]
  7. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tencologico (CNPq) from Brazil [311415/2020-2]
  8. Interreg Italia-Slovenia [ISE-EMH 07/2019]

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This study used VEA to identify altered pathways in individuals exposed to asbestos and confirmed oxidative stress and chromosome instability as the main culprits for asbestos-induced cancers. It also discovered genetic assets that protect genome stability and susceptibility assets that predispose to a worse outcome.
The variant enrichment analysis (VEA), a recently developed bioinformatic workflow, has been shown to be a valuable tool for whole-exome sequencing data analysis, allowing finding differences between the number of genetic variants in a given pathway compared to a reference dataset. In a previous study, using VEA, we identified different pathway signatures associated with the development of pulmonary toxicities in mesothelioma patients treated with radical hemithoracic radiation therapy. Here, we used VEA to discover novel pathways altered in individuals exposed to asbestos who developed or not asbestos-related diseases (lung cancer or mesothelioma). A population-based autopsy study was designed in which asbestos exposure was evaluated and quantitated by investigating objective signs of exposure. We selected patients with similar exposure to asbestos. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues were used as a source of DNA and whole-exome sequencing analysis was performed, running VEA to identify potentially disrupted pathways in individuals who developed thoracic cancers induced by asbestos exposure. By using VEA analysis, we confirmed the involvement of pathways considered as the main culprits for asbestos-induced carcinogenesis: oxidative stress and chromosome instability. Furthermore, we identified protective genetic assets preserving genome stability and susceptibility assets predisposing to a worst outcome.

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