Massive Genomic Rearrangement Acquired in a Single Catastrophic Event during Cancer Development
Wellcome Sanger Institute · Johns Hopkins University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Cancer is driven by somatically acquired point mutations and chromosomal rearrangements, conventionally thought to accumulate gradually over time. Using next-generation sequencing, we characterize a phenomenon, which we term chromothripsis, whereby tens to hundreds of genomic rearrangements occur in a one-off cellular crisis. Rearrangements involving one or a few chromosomes crisscross back and forth across involved regions, generating frequent oscillations between two copy number states. These genomic hallmarks are highly improbable if rearrangements accumulate over time and instead imply that nearly all occur during a single cellular catastrophe. The stamp of chromothripsis can be seen in at least 2%-3% of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 127.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
32Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Event (particle physics)
- Cancer
- Gene rearrangement
- Computational biology
- Genetics
- Evolutionary biology
- Gene
- Good health and well-being