Extensive transduction of nonrepetitive DNA mediated by L1 retrotransposition in cancer genomes
Authors list
Jose MC Tubio Yilong Li Young Seok Ju Inigo Martincorena Susanna L Cooke Marta Tojo Gunes Gundem Christodoulos P Pipinikas Jorge Zamora Keiran Raine Andrew Menzies Pablo Roman-Garcia Anthony Fullam Moritz Gerstung Adam Shlien Patrick S Tarpey Elli Papaemmanuil Stian Knappskog Peter Van Loo Manasa Ramakrishna Helen R Davies John Marshall David C Wedge Jon W Teague Adam P Butler Serena Nik-Zainal Ludmil Alexandrov Sam Behjati Lucy R Yates Niccolo Bolli Laura Mudie Claire Hardy Sancha Martin Stuart McLaren Sarah O'Meara Elizabeth Anderson Mark Maddison Stephen Gamble ICGC Breast Cancer Group ICGC Bone Canccer Group ICGC Prostate Cancer Group Christopher Foster Anne Y Warren Hayley Whitaker Daniel Brewer Rosalind Eeles Colin Cooper David Neal Andy G Lynch Tapio Visakorpi William B Isaacs Laura van't Veer Carlos Caldas Christine Desmedt Christos Sotiriou Sam Aparicio John A Foekens Jórunn Erla Eyfjörd Sunil R Lakhani Gilles Thomas Ola Myklebost Paul N Span Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale Andrea L Richardson Marc Van de Vijver Anne Vincent-Salomon Gert G Van den Eynden Adrienne M Flanagan P Andrew Futreal Sam M Janes G Steven Bova Michael R Stratton Ultan McDermott Peter J Campbell Toggle all authors (74)
Abstract
Long interspersed nuclear element-1 (L1) retrotransposons are mobile repetitive elements that are abundant in the human genome. L1 elements propagate through RNA intermediates. In the germ line, neighboring, nonrepetitive sequences are occasionally mobilized by the L1 machinery, a process called 3' transduction. Because 3' transductions are potentially mutagenic, we explored the extent to which they occur somatically during tumorigenesis. Studying cancer genomes from 244 patients, we found that tumors from 53% of the patients had somatic retrotranspositions, of which 24% were 3' transductions. Fingerprinting of donor L1s revealed that a handful of source L1 elements in a tumor can spawn from tens to hundreds of 3' transductions, which can themselves seed further retrotranspositions. The activity of individual L1 elements fluctuated during tumor evolution and correlated with L1 promoter hypomethylation. The 3' transductions disseminated genes, exons, and regulatory elements to new locations, most often to heterochromatic regions of the genome.
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Publisher website (DOI) 10.1126/science.1251343
Europe PubMed Central 25082706
Pubmed 25082706
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