4.8 Article

Signatures of copy number alterations in human cancer

期刊

NATURE
卷 606, 期 7916, 页码 984-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04738-6

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资金

  1. Cancer Research UK Clinician Scientist fellowship [18387]
  2. Cancer Research UK Travel Award [27969]
  3. Sarcoma UK-Sayako Grace Robinson studentship [SGR04.2017]
  4. National Institute for Health Research
  5. University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre
  6. Cancer Research UK University College London Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre
  7. US National Institutes of Health [R01 ES030993, R01 ES032547]
  8. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship
  9. Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering
  10. Francis Crick Institute from UK Medical Research Council [FC001202]
  11. Francis Crick Institute from Wellcome Trust [FC001202]
  12. Medical Research Council [MR/L016311/1]
  13. Winton Charitable Foundation
  14. FRS-FNRS

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Gains and losses of DNA are prevalent in cancer and contribute to cancer initiation, progression, and therapeutic resistance. A study identified 21 copy number signatures that explain 97% of the sample's copy number patterns.
Gains and losses of DNA are prevalent in cancer and emerge as a consequence of inter-related processes of replication stress, mitotic errors, spindle multipolarity and breakage-fusion-bridge cycles, among others, which may lead to chromosomal instability and aneuploidy(1,2). These copy number alterations contribute to cancer initiation, progression and therapeutic resistance(3-5). Here we present a conceptual framework to examine the patterns of copy number alterations in human cancer that is widely applicable to diverse data types, including whole-genome sequencing, whole-exome sequencing, reduced representation bisulfite sequencing, single-cell DNA sequencing and SNP6 microarray data. Deploying this framework to 9,873 cancers representing 33 human cancer types from The Cancer Genome Atlas(6) revealed a set of 21 copy number signatures that explain the copy number patterns of 97% of samples. Seventeen copy number signatures were attributed to biological phenomena of whole-genome doubling, aneuploidy, loss of heterozygosity, homologous recombination deficiency, chromothripsis and haploidization. The aetiologies of four copy number signatures remain unexplained. Some cancer types harbour amplicon signatures associated with extrachromosomal DNA, disease-specific survival and proto-oncogene gains such as MDM2. In contrast to base-scale mutational signatures, no copy number signature was associated with many known exogenous cancer risk factors. Our results synthesize the global landscape of copy number alterations in human cancer by revealing a diversity of mutational processes that give rise to these alterations.

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