Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.
Department of Pathology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.
Biomolecules. 2022 Oct 26;12(11):1570. doi: 10.3390/biom12111570.
In the past decade, defective DNA repair has been increasingly linked with cancer progression. Human tumors with markers of defective DNA repair and increased replication stress exhibit genomic instability and poor survival rates across tumor types. Seminal studies have demonstrated that genomic instability develops following inactivation of BRCA1, BRCA2, or BRCA-related genes. However, it is recognized that many tumors exhibit genomic instability but lack BRCA inactivation. We sought to identify a pan-cancer mechanism that underpins genomic instability and cancer progression in BRCA-wildtype tumors. Using multi-omics data from two independent consortia, we analyzed data from dozens of tumor types to identify patient cohorts characterized by poor outcomes, genomic instability, and wildtype BRCA genes. We developed several novel metrics to identify the genetic underpinnings of genomic instability in tumors with wildtype BRCA. Associated clinical data was mined to analyze patient responses to standard of care therapies and potential differences in metastatic dissemination. Systematic analysis of the DNA repair landscape revealed that defective single-strand break repair, translesion synthesis, and non-homologous end-joining effectors drive genomic instability in tumors with wildtype BRCA and BRCA-related genes. Importantly, we find that loss of these effectors promotes replication stress, therapy resistance, and increased primary carcinoma to brain metastasis. Our results have defined a new pan-cancer class of tumors characterized by replicative instability (RIN). RIN is defined by the accumulation of intra-chromosomal, gene-level gain and loss events at replication stress sensitive (RSS) genome sites. We find that RIN accelerates cancer progression by driving copy number alterations and transcriptional program rewiring that promote tumor evolution. Clinically, we find that RIN drives therapy resistance and distant metastases across multiple tumor types.
在过去的十年中,有缺陷的 DNA 修复与癌症的进展越来越相关。具有 DNA 修复缺陷和复制应激增加标记的人类肿瘤表现出基因组不稳定性和各种肿瘤类型的生存率低。开创性的研究表明,基因组不稳定性是在 BRCA1、BRCA2 或 BRCA 相关基因失活后发展起来的。然而,人们认识到,许多肿瘤表现出基因组不稳定性,但缺乏 BRCA 失活。我们试图确定一种泛癌机制,该机制是 BRCA 野生型肿瘤中基因组不稳定性和癌症进展的基础。 我们使用来自两个独立联盟的多组学数据,分析了数十种肿瘤类型的数据,以确定具有不良结局、基因组不稳定性和野生型 BRCA 基因的患者队列。我们开发了几种新的指标来识别野生型 BRCA 肿瘤中基因组不稳定性的遗传基础。挖掘相关的临床数据,以分析患者对标准治疗方案的反应以及转移性扩散的潜在差异。 对 DNA 修复景观的系统分析表明,有缺陷的单链断裂修复、跨损伤合成和非同源末端连接效应物会导致野生型 BRCA 和 BRCA 相关基因的肿瘤基因组不稳定。重要的是,我们发现这些效应物的缺失会促进复制应激、治疗耐药性,并增加原发性癌向脑转移。 我们的研究结果定义了一种新的泛癌肿瘤类别,其特征是复制不稳定性(RIN)。RIN 是通过在复制应激敏感(RSS)基因组位点积累染色体内、基因水平的增益和缺失事件来定义的。我们发现 RIN 通过驱动拷贝数改变和促进肿瘤进化的转录程序重排来加速癌症进展。临床上,我们发现 RIN 会导致多种肿瘤类型的治疗耐药性和远处转移。