生物
放射治疗
断点
癌症
DNA修复
遗传学
DNA损伤
基因组
癌症研究
内科学
生物信息学
染色体
基因
DNA
医学
作者
Emre Kocakavuk,Kevin Anderson,Frederick S. Varn,Kevin C. Johnson,Samirkumar B. Amin,Erik P. Sulman,Martijn P. Lolkema,Floris P Barthel,Roel G.W. Verhaak
出处
期刊:Nature Genetics
[Springer Nature]
日期:2021-05-27
卷期号:53 (7): 1088-1096
被引量:115
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41588-021-00874-3
摘要
Ionizing radiation causes DNA damage and is a mainstay for cancer treatment, but understanding of its genomic impact is limited. We analyzed mutational spectra following radiotherapy in 190 paired primary and recurrent gliomas from the Glioma Longitudinal Analysis Consortium and 3,693 post-treatment metastatic tumors from the Hartwig Medical Foundation. We identified radiotherapy-associated significant increases in the burden of small deletions (5–15 bp) and large deletions (20+ bp to chromosome-arm length). Small deletions were characterized by a larger span size, lacking breakpoint microhomology and were genomically more dispersed when compared to pre-existing deletions and deletions in non-irradiated tumors. Mutational signature analysis implicated classical non-homologous end-joining-mediated DNA damage repair and APOBEC mutagenesis following radiotherapy. A high radiation-associated deletion burden was associated with worse clinical outcomes, suggesting that effective repair of radiation-induced DNA damage is detrimental to patient survival. These results may be leveraged to predict sensitivity to radiation therapy in recurrent cancer. Radiotherapy induces small and large deletions as well as inversions across the genome in multiple cancer types. The genomic changes associated with radiotherapy correlate with poorer clinical outcomes.
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