Unscrambling cancer genomes via integrated analysis of structural variation and copy number

Publication date

2022-04-13

Authors

Shale, Charles
Cameron, Daniel L
Baber, Jonathan
Wong, Marie
Cowley, Mark J
Papenfuss, Anthony T
Cuppen, EdwinORCID 0000-0002-0400-9542ISNI 0000000139479002
Priestley, Peter

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by

Abstract

Complex somatic genomic rearrangements and copy number alterations are hallmarks of nearly all cancers. We have developed an algorithm, LINX, to aid interpretation of structural variant and copy number data derived from short-read, whole-genome sequencing. LINX classifies raw structural variant calls into distinct events and predicts their effect on the local structure of the derivative chromosome and the functional impact on affected genes. Visualizations facilitate further investigation of complex rearrangements. LINX allows insights into a diverse range of structural variation events and can reliably detect pathogenic rearrangements, including gene fusions, immunoglobulin enhancer rearrangements, intragenic deletions, and duplications. Uniquely, LINX also predicts chained fusions that we demonstrate account for 13% of clinically relevant oncogenic fusions. LINX also reports a class of inactivation events that we term homozygous disruptions that may be a driver mutation in up to 9% of tumors and may frequently affect PTEN, TP53, and RB1.

Keywords

LINX, cancer genomics, ecDNA, gene fusion, genomic rearrangement, genomic shard, homozygous disruption, mobile element insertion, reciprocal duplication, structural variation, Genetics, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)

Citation

Shale, C, Cameron, D L, Baber, J, Wong, M, Cowley, M J, Papenfuss, A T, Cuppen, E & Priestley, P 2022, 'Unscrambling cancer genomes via integrated analysis of structural variation and copy number', Cell genomics, vol. 2, no. 4, 100112. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xgen.2022.100112