作者
Ping Zhang,Isaac Kitchen-Smith,Lingyun Xiong,Giovanni Stracquadanio,Katherine A. Brown,P. Richter,Marsha D. Wallace,Elisabeth E. Bond,Natasha Sahgal,Samantha Moore,Svanhild Nornes,Sarah De Val,Mirvat Surakhy,David Sims,Xuting Wang,Douglas A. Bell,Jorge Zerón-Medina,Yanyan Jiang,Anderson J. Ryan,Joanna Selfe,Janet Shipley,Siddhartha Kar,Paul D.P. Pharoah,Chey Loveday,Rick Jansen,Lukasz F. Grochola,Claire Palles,Andrew Protheroe,Val Millar,Daniel Ebner,Meghana S. Pagadala,Sarah P. Blagden,Tim Maughan,Enric Domingo,Ian Tomlinson,Clare Turnbull,Hannah Carter,Gareth L. Bond
摘要
Insights into oncogenesis derived from cancer susceptibility loci (SNP) hold the potential to facilitate better cancer management and treatment through precision oncology. However, therapeutic insights have thus far been limited by our current lack of understanding regarding both interactions of these loci with somatic cancer driver mutations and their influence on tumorigenesis. For example, although both germline and somatic genetic variation to the p53 tumor suppressor pathway are known to promote tumorigenesis, little is known about the extent to which such variants cooperate to alter pathway activity. Here we hypothesize that cancer risk-associated germline variants interact with somatic