Distinct subtypes of genomic deletion size influence the landscape of aneuploidy and outcome in prostate cancer.

Mol Cytogenet

Department of Genetics, Ribeirão Preto Medical School, University of São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil.

Published: January 2018

Background: Inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene by deletion occurs in 20-30% of prostate cancer tumors and loss strongly correlates with a worse outcome. PTEN loss of function not only leads to activation of the PI3K/AKT pathway, but is also thought to affect genome stability and increase levels of tumor aneuploidy. We performed an in silico integrative genomic and transcriptomic analysis of 491 TCGA prostate cancer tumors. These data were used to map the genomic sizes of gene deletions and to characterize levels of instability and patterns of aneuploidy acquisition.

Results: homozygous deletions had a significant increase in aneuploidy compared to tumors without an apparent deletion, and hemizygous deletions showed an intermediate aneuploidy profile. A supervised clustering of somatic copy number alterations (SCNA) demonstrated that the size of deletions was not random, but comprised five distinct subtypes: (1) "Small Interstitial" (70 bp-789Kb); (2) "Large Interstitial" (1-7 MB); (3) "Large Proximal" (3-65 MB); (4) "Large Terminal" (8-64 MB), and (5) "Extensive" (71-132 MB). Many of the deleted fragments in each subtype were flanked by low copy repetitive (LCR) sequences. SCNAs such as gain at 3q21.1-3q29 and deletions at 8p, , and were variably present in all subtypes. Other SCNAs appeared to be recurrent in some deletion subtypes, but absent from others. To determine how the aneuploidy influenced global levels of gene expression, we performed a comparative transcriptome analysis. One deletion subtype (Large Interstitial) was characterized by gene expression changes associated with angiogenesis and cell adhesion, structure, and metabolism. Logistic regression demonstrated that this deletion subtype was associated with a high Gleason score (HR = 2.386; 95% C.I. 1.245-4.572), extraprostatic extension (HR = 2.423, 95% C.I. 1.157-5.075), and metastasis (HR = 7.135; 95% C.I. 1.540-33.044). Univariate and multivariate Cox Regression showed that presence of this deletion subtype was also strongly predictive of disease recurrence.

Conclusions: Our findings indicate that genomic deletions of fall into five different size distributions, with breakpoints that often occur close LCR regions, and that each subtype is associated with a characteristic aneuploidy signature. The Large Interstitial deletion had a distinct gene expression signature that was related to cancer progression and was also predictive of a worse prognosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5753467PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13039-017-0348-yDOI Listing

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