4.7 Article

Mutational mechanisms of amplifications revealed by analysis of clustered rearrangements in breast cancers

Journal

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 11, Pages 2223-2231

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdy404

Keywords

breast cancer; genome; rearrangements; mutational mechanism; selection; amplification

Categories

Funding

  1. Breast Cancer Somatic Genetics Study (BASIS), European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2010-2014) [242006]
  2. Breast Cancer Somatic Genetics Study (BASIS), European Community (HER2+ project (Institut National du Cancer France)) [226-2009, 02-2011, 41-2012, 144-2008, 06-2012]
  3. Korean Health Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health Welfare [A111218-SC01]
  4. Wellcome Trust Strategic Award [101126/B/13/Z]
  5. EU-FP7-SUPPRESSTEM project
  6. CRUK Advanced Clinician Scientist Award [C60100/A23916]
  7. Health Region South-East, Norway
  8. Norwegian Cancer Society
  9. Lund University
  10. Breast Cancer Somatic Genetics Study (BASIS), European Community (Triple Negative project (Wellcome Trust)) [077012/Z/05/Z]
  11. Wellcome Trust [101126/B/13/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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Complex clusters of rearrangements are a challenge in interpretation of cancer genomes. Some clusters of rearrangements demarcate clear amplifications of driver oncogenes but others are less well understood. A detailed analysis of rearrangements within these complex clusters could reveal new insights into selection and underlying mutational mechanisms. Here, we systematically investigate rearrangements that are densely clustered in individual tumours in a cohort of 560 breast cancers. Applying an agnostic approach, we identify 21 hotspots where clustered rearrangements recur across cancers. Some hotspots coincide with known oncogene loci including CCND1, ERBB2, ZNF217, chr8:ZNF703/FGFR1, IGF1R, and MYC. Others contain cancer genes not typically associated with breast cancer: MCL1, PTP4A1, and MYB. Intriguingly, we identify clustered rearrangements that physically connect distant hotspots. In particular, we observe simultaneous amplification of chr8:ZNF703/FGFR1 and chr11:CCND1 where deep analysis reveals that a chr8-chr11 translocation is likely to be an early, critical, initiating event. We present an overview of complex rearrangements in breast cancer, highlighting a potential new way for detecting drivers and revealing novel mechanistic insights into the formation of two common amplicons.

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