4.2 Article

Standing in the canine precision medicine knowledge gap: Improving annotation of canine cancer genomic biomarkers through systematic comparative analysis of human cancer mutations in COSMIC

Journal

VETERINARY AND COMPARATIVE ONCOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/vco.12911

Keywords

cancer; caninisation; comparative genomics; COSMIC; dog; human; somatic mutations

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The accumulation of cancer mutation data has greatly improved human oncology and can also contribute to advancements in canine oncology. However, interpreting and using this data in dogs is challenging due to the lack of direct functional data. By analyzing the conservation and conversion of human mutations to the canine genome, we can bridge this knowledge gap and facilitate the advancement of canine precision medicine.
The accrual of cancer mutation data and related functional and clinical associations have revolutionised human oncology, enabling the advancement of precision medicine and biomarker-guided clinical management. The catalogue of cancer mutations is also growing in canine cancers. However, without direct high-powered functional data in dogs, it remains challenging to interpret and utilise them in research and clinical settings. It is well-recognised that canine and human cancers share genetic, molecular and phenotypic similarities. Therefore, leveraging the massive wealth of human mutation data may help advance canine oncology. Here, we present a structured analysis of sequence conservation and conversion of human mutations to the canine genome through a 'caninisation' process. We applied this analysis to COSMIC, the Catalogue of Somatic Mutations in Cancer, the most prominent human cancer mutation database. For the project's initial phase, we focused on the subset of the COSMIC data corresponding to Cancer Gene Census (CGC) genes. A total of 670 canine orthologs were found for 721 CGC genes. In these genes, 365 K unique mutations across 160 tumour types were converted successfully to canine coordinates. We identified shared putative cancer-driving mutations, including pathogenic and hotspot mutations and mutations bearing similar biomarker associations with diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic utility. Thus, this structured caninisation of human cancer mutations facilitates the interpretation and annotation of canine mutations and helps bridge the knowledge gap to enable canine precision medicine.

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