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Detection of disease-causing mutations in prostate cancer by NGS sequencing. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Gene mutations can influence tumor development and treatment choices in prostate cancer (PCa), highlighting the importance of mutation research for better patient care.
  • A study analyzed genomic DNA from 48 PCa samples and identified 312 significant mutations, mostly single nucleotide variants, with key genes like KMT2D and TP53 showing a strong association with prognosis.
  • The findings suggest that specific mutations, including some linked to hereditary cancer syndromes, could serve as valuable prognostic markers to enhance treatment strategies for PCa patients.

Article Abstract

Gene mutations may affect the fate of many tumors including prostate cancer (PCa); therefore, the research of specific mutations associated with tumor outcomes might help the urologist to identify the best therapy for PCa patients such as surgical resection, adjuvant therapy or active surveillance. Genomic DNA (gDNA) was extracted from 48 paraffin-embedded PCa samples and normal paired tissues. Next, gDNA was amplified and analyzed by next-generation sequencing (NGS) using a specific gene panel for PCa. Raw data were refined to exclude false-positive mutations; thus, variants with coverage and frequency lower than 100× and 5%, respectively were removed. Mutation significance was processed by Genomic Evolutionary Rate Profiling, ClinVar, and Varsome tools. Most of 3000 mutations (80%) were single nucleotide variants and the remaining 20% indels. After raw data elaboration, 312 variants were selected. Most mutated genes were KMT2D (26.45%), FOXA1 (16.13%), ATM (15.81%), ZFHX3 (9.35%), TP53 (8.06%), and APC (5.48%). Hot spot mutations in FOXA1, ATM, ZFHX3, SPOP, and MED12 were also found. Truncating mutations of ATM, lesions lying in hot spot regions of SPOP and FOXA1 as well as mutations of TP53 correlated with poor prognosis. Importantly, we have also found some germline mutations associated with hereditary cancer-predisposing syndrome. gDNA sequencing of 48 cancer tissues by NGS allowed to detect new tumor variants as well as confirmed lesions in genes linked to prostate cancer. Overall, somatic and germline mutations linked to good/poor prognosis could represent new prognostic tools to improve the management of PCa patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9320837PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbin.11803DOI Listing

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