[HTML][HTML] Characterizing the cancer genome in lung adenocarcinoma

BA Weir, MS Woo, G Getz, S Perner, L Ding… - Nature, 2007 - nature.com
BA Weir, MS Woo, G Getz, S Perner, L Ding, R Beroukhim, WM Lin, MA Province, A Kraja…
Nature, 2007nature.com
Somatic alterations in cellular DNA underlie almost all human cancers. The prospect of
targeted therapies and the development of high-resolution, genome-wide approaches,,,,, are
now spurring systematic efforts to characterize cancer genomes. Here we report a large-
scale project to characterize copy-number alterations in primary lung adenocarcinomas. By
analysis of a large collection of tumours (n= 371) using dense single nucleotide
polymorphism arrays, we identify a total of 57 significantly recurrent events. We find that 26 …
Abstract
Somatic alterations in cellular DNA underlie almost all human cancers. The prospect of targeted therapies and the development of high-resolution, genome-wide approaches,,,,, are now spurring systematic efforts to characterize cancer genomes. Here we report a large-scale project to characterize copy-number alterations in primary lung adenocarcinomas. By analysis of a large collection of tumours (n = 371) using dense single nucleotide polymorphism arrays, we identify a total of 57 significantly recurrent events. We find that 26 of 39 autosomal chromosome arms show consistent large-scale copy-number gain or loss, of which only a handful have been linked to a specific gene. We also identify 31 recurrent focal events, including 24 amplifications and 7 homozygous deletions. Only six of these focal events are currently associated with known mutations in lung carcinomas. The most common event, amplification of chromosome 14q13.3, is found in ∼12% of samples. On the basis of genomic and functional analyses, we identify NKX2-1 (NK2 homeobox 1, also called TITF1), which lies in the minimal 14q13.3 amplification interval and encodes a lineage-specific transcription factor, as a novel candidate proto-oncogene involved in a significant fraction of lung adenocarcinomas. More generally, our results indicate that many of the genes that are involved in lung adenocarcinoma remain to be discovered.
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