A systematic analysis of genetic interactions and their underlying biology in childhood cancer

Publication date

2021-12

Authors

Daub, Josephine TISNI 000000041949424X
Amini, Saman
Kersjes, Denise J E
Ma, Xiaotu
Jäger, Natalie
Zhang, Jinghui
Pfister, Stefan M
Holstege, Frank C P
Kemmeren, Patrick

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Childhood cancer is a major cause of child death in developed countries. Genetic interactions between mutated genes play an important role in cancer development. They can be detected by searching for pairs of mutated genes that co-occur more (or less) often than expected. Co-occurrence suggests a cooperative role in cancer development, while mutual exclusivity points to synthetic lethality, a phenomenon of interest in cancer treatment research. Little is known about genetic interactions in childhood cancer. We apply a statistical pipeline to detect genetic interactions in a combined dataset comprising over 2,500 tumors from 23 cancer types. The resulting genetic interaction map of childhood cancers comprises 15 co-occurring and 27 mutually exclusive candidates. The biological explanation of most candidates points to either tumor subtype, pathway epistasis or cooperation while synthetic lethality plays a much smaller role. Thus, other explanations beyond synthetic lethality should be considered when interpreting genetic interaction test results.

Keywords

Medicine (miscellaneous), General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Daub, J T, Amini, S, Kersjes, D J E, Ma, X, Jäger, N, Zhang, J, Pfister, S M, Holstege, F C P & Kemmeren, P 2021, 'A systematic analysis of genetic interactions and their underlying biology in childhood cancer', Communications Biology, vol. 4, no. 1, 1139. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-02647-4