Mutational landscape of a chemically-induced mouse model of liver cancer

被引:107
作者
Connor, Frances [1 ]
Rayner, Tim F. [1 ]
Aitken, Sarah J. [1 ,2 ]
Feig, Christine [1 ]
Lukk, Margus [1 ]
Santoyo-Lopez, Javier [3 ]
Odom, Duncan T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Canc Res UK Cambridge Inst, Robinson Way, Cambridge CB2 0RE, England
[2] Cambridge Univ Hosp NHS Fdn Trust, Addenbrookes Hosp, Dept Histopathol, Hills Rd, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, England
[3] Univ Edinburgh, Roslin Inst, Edinburgh Genom Clin, Easter Bush EH25 9RG, Midlothian, Scotland
基金
英国惠康基金; 欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
Hepatocellular carcinoma; Carcinogen mouse model; Cancer genomics; Mutational signatures; Hras; HEPATOCELLULAR-CARCINOMA; READ ALIGNMENT; SIGNATURES; TUMORS; RAS; HEPATOCARCINOGENESIS; SUSCEPTIBILITY; PATHOGENESIS; EXPRESSION; MICE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhep.2018.06.009
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Background & Aims: Carcinogen-induced mouse models of liver cancer are used extensively to study the pathogenesis of the disease and are critical for validating candidate therapeutics. These models can recapitulate molecular and histological features of human disease. However, it is not known if the genomic alterations driving these mouse tumour genomes are comparable to those found in human tumours. Herein, we provide a detailed genomic characterisation of tumours from a commonly used mouse model of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods: We analysed whole exome sequences of liver tumours arising in mice exposed to diethylnitrosamine (DEN). Mutational signatures were compared between liver tumours from DEN-treated and untreated mice, and human HCCs. Results: DEN-initiated tumours had a high, uniform number of somatic single nucleotide variants (SNVs), with few insertions, deletions or copy number alterations, consistent with the known genotoxic action of DEN. Exposure of hepatocytes to DEN left a reproducible mutational imprint in resulting tumour exomes which we could computationally reconstruct using six known COSMIC mutational signatures. The tumours carried a high diversity of low-incidence, non-synonymous point mutations in many oncogenes and tumour suppressors, reflecting the stochastic introduction of SNVs into the hepatocyte genome by the carcinogen. We identified four recurrently mutated genes that were putative oncogenic drivers of HCC in this model. Every neoplasm carried activating hotspot mutations either in codon 61 of Hras, in codon 584 of Braf or in codon 254 of Egfr. Truncating mutations of Apc occurred in 21% of neoplasms, which were exclusively carcinomas supporting a role for deregulation of Wnt/b-catenin signalling in cancer progression. Conclusions: Our study provides detailed insight into the mutational landscape of tumours arising in a commonly used carcinogen model of HCC, facilitating the future use of this model to better understand the human disease. Lay summary: Mouse models are widely used to study the biology of cancer and to test potential therapies. Herein, we have described the mutational landscape of tumours arising in a carcinogen-induced mouse model of liver cancer. Since cancer is a disease caused by genomic alterations, information about the patterns and types of mutations in the tumours in this mouse model should facilitate its use to study human liver cancer. (C) 2018 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license.
引用
收藏
页码:840 / 850
页数:11
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]   Evolution of Genomic Instability in Diethylnitrosamine-Induced Hepatocarcinogenesis in Mice [J].
Aleksic, Kristina ;
Lackner, Carolin ;
Geigl, Jochen B. ;
Schwarz, Martina ;
Auer, Martina ;
Ulz, Peter ;
Fischer, Maria ;
Trajanoski, Zlatko ;
Otte, Marcus ;
Speicher, Michael R. .
HEPATOLOGY, 2011, 53 (03) :895-904
[2]   Signatures of mutational processes in human cancer [J].
Alexandrov, Ludmil B. ;
Nik-Zainal, Serena ;
Wedge, David C. ;
Aparicio, Samuel A. J. R. ;
Behjati, Sam ;
Biankin, Andrew V. ;
Bignell, Graham R. ;
Bolli, Niccolo ;
Borg, Ake ;
Borresen-Dale, Anne-Lise ;
Boyault, Sandrine ;
Burkhardt, Birgit ;
Butler, Adam P. ;
Caldas, Carlos ;
Davies, Helen R. ;
Desmedt, Christine ;
Eils, Roland ;
Eyfjord, Jorunn Erla ;
Foekens, John A. ;
Greaves, Mel ;
Hosoda, Fumie ;
Hutter, Barbara ;
Ilicic, Tomislav ;
Imbeaud, Sandrine ;
Imielinsk, Marcin ;
Jaeger, Natalie ;
Jones, David T. W. ;
Jones, David ;
Knappskog, Stian ;
Kool, Marcel ;
Lakhani, Sunil R. ;
Lopez-Otin, Carlos ;
Martin, Sancha ;
Munshi, Nikhil C. ;
Nakamura, Hiromi ;
Northcott, Paul A. ;
Pajic, Marina ;
Papaemmanuil, Elli ;
Paradiso, Angelo ;
Pearson, John V. ;
Puente, Xose S. ;
Raine, Keiran ;
Ramakrishna, Manasa ;
Richardson, Andrea L. ;
Richter, Julia ;
Rosenstiel, Philip ;
Schlesner, Matthias ;
Schumacher, Ton N. ;
Span, Paul N. ;
Teague, Jon W. .
NATURE, 2013, 500 (7463) :415-+
[3]   Comprehensive and Integrative Genomic Characterization of Hepatocellular Carcinoma [J].
Ally, Adrian ;
Balasundaram, Miruna ;
Carlsen, Rebecca ;
Chuah, Eric ;
Clarke, Amanda ;
Dhalla, Noreen ;
Holt, Robert A. ;
Jones, Steven J. M. ;
Lee, Darlene ;
Ma, Yussanne ;
Marra, Marco A. ;
Mayo, Michael ;
Moore, Richard A. ;
Mungall, Andrew J. ;
Schein, Jacqueline E. ;
Sipahimalani, Payal ;
Tam, Angela ;
Thiessen, Nina ;
Cheung, Dorothy ;
Wong, Tina ;
Brooks, Denise ;
Robertson, A. Gordon ;
Bowlby, Reanne ;
Mungall, Karen ;
Sadeghi, Sara ;
Xi, Liu ;
Covington, Kyle ;
Shinbrot, Eve ;
Wheeler, David A. ;
Gibbs, Richard A. ;
Donehower, Lawrence A. ;
Wang, Linghua ;
Bowen, Jay ;
Gastier-Foster, Julie M. ;
Gerken, Mark ;
Helsel, Carmen ;
Leraas, Kristen M. ;
Lichtenberg, Tara M. ;
Ramirez, Nilsa C. ;
Wise, Lisa ;
Zmuda, Erik ;
Gabriel, Stacey B. ;
Meyerson, Matthew ;
Cibulskis, Carrie ;
Murray, Bradley A. ;
Shih, Juliann ;
Beroukhim, Rameen ;
Cherniack, Andrew D. ;
Schumacher, Steven E. ;
Saksena, Gordon .
CELL, 2017, 169 (07) :1327-+
[4]   Differences in the Regulation of K-Ras and H-Ras Isoforms by Monoubiquitination [J].
Baker, Rachael ;
Wilkerson, Emily M. ;
Sumita, Kazutaka ;
Isom, Daniel G. ;
Sasaki, Atsuo T. ;
Dohlman, Henrik G. ;
Campbell, Sharon L. .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2013, 288 (52) :36856-36862
[5]   Mouse models for liver cancer [J].
Bakiri, Latifa ;
Wagner, Erwin F. .
MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY, 2013, 7 (02) :206-223
[6]   Differential selection for B-raf and Ha-ras mutated liver tumors in mice with high and low susceptibility to hepatocarcinogenesis [J].
Buchmann, Albrecht ;
Karcier, Zuleyha ;
Schmid, Benjamin ;
Strathmann, Julia ;
Schwarz, Michael .
MUTATION RESEARCH-FUNDAMENTAL AND MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF MUTAGENESIS, 2008, 638 (1-2) :66-74
[7]  
Caviglia Jorge Matias, 2015, Methods Mol Biol, V1267, P165, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4939-2297-0_8
[8]   Emerging landscape of oncogenic signatures across human cancers [J].
Ciriello, Giovanni ;
Miller, Martin L. ;
Aksoy, Buelent Arman ;
Senbabaoglu, Yasin ;
Schultz, Nikolaus ;
Sander, Chris .
NATURE GENETICS, 2013, 45 (10) :1127-U247
[9]   The Ras/MAPK pathway and hepatocarcinoma: pathogenesis and therapeutic implications [J].
Delire, Benedicte ;
Starkel, Peter .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 2015, 45 (06) :609-623
[10]   COSMIC: somatic cancer genetics at high-resolution [J].
Forbes, Simon A. ;
Beare, David ;
Boutselakis, Harry ;
Bamford, Sally ;
Bindal, Nidhi ;
Tate, John ;
Cole, Charlotte G. ;
Ward, Sari ;
Dawson, Elisabeth ;
Ponting, Laura ;
Stefancsik, Raymund ;
Harsha, Bhavana ;
Kok, Chai Yin ;
Jia, Mingming ;
Jubb, Harry ;
Sondka, Zbyslaw ;
Thompson, Sam ;
De, Tisham ;
Campbell, Peter J. .
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2017, 45 (D1) :D777-D783