4.8 Article

Whole-genome mutational landscape and characterization of noncoding and structural mutations in liver cancer

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 48, Issue 5, Pages 500-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ng.3547

Keywords

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Funding

  1. RIKEN President's Fund
  2. JSPS [25134717, 25670375, 23114001, 15H04814]
  3. Princess Takamatsu Cancer Research Fund
  4. Takeda Science Foundation
  5. Practical Research for Innovative Cancer Control from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development
  6. CREST from the Japan Science and Technology Agency
  7. National Cancer Center Research and Development Funds [26-A-5]
  8. National Cancer Center Biobank - National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund, Japan
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15K08987, 26430196, 25670375, 26114721, 26293308, 15H04814, 15H05912] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Liver cancer, which is most often associated with virus infection, is prevalent worldwide, and its underlying etiology and genomic structure are heterogeneous. Here we provide a whole-genome landscape of somatic alterations in 300 liver cancers from Japanese individuals. Our comprehensive analysis identified point mutations, structural variations (STVs), and virus integrations, in noncoding and coding regions. We discovered mutational signatures related to liver carcinogenesis and recurrently mutated coding and noncoding regions, such as long intergenic noncoding RNA genes (NEAT1 and MALAT1), promoters, CTCF-binding sites, and regulatory regions. STV analysis found a significant association with replication timing and identified known (CDKN2A, CCND1, APC, and TERT) and new (ASH1L, NCOR1, and MACROD2) cancer-related genes that were recurrently affected by STVs, leading to altered expression. These results emphasize the value of whole-genome sequencing analysis in discovering cancer driver mutations and understanding comprehensive molecular profiles of liver cancer, especially with regard to STVs and noncoding mutations.

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