Publication

Tracing cancer evolution and heterogeneity using Hi-C.

current
   February 13th, 2024 at 9:59pm

Overview


Abstract

Chromosomal rearrangements can initiate and drive cancer progression, yet it has been challenging to evaluate their impact, especially in genetically heterogeneous solid cancers. To address this problem we developed HiDENSEC, a new computational framework for analyzing chromatin conformation capture in heterogeneous samples that can infer somatic copy number alterations, characterize large-scale chromosomal rearrangements, and estimate cancer cell fractions. After validating HiDENSEC with in silico and in vitro controls, we used it to characterize chromosome-scale evolution during melanoma progression in formalin-fixed tumor samples from three patients. The resulting comprehensive annotation of the genomic events includes copy number neutral translocations that disrupt tumor suppressor genes such as NF1, whole chromosome arm exchanges that result in loss of CDKN2A, and whole-arm copy-number neutral loss of homozygosity involving PTEN. These findings show that large-scale chromosomal rearrangements occur throughout cancer evolution and that characterizing these events yields insights into drivers of melanoma progression.

Authors

Erdmann-Pham DD  •  Batra SS  •  Turkalo TK  •  Durbin J  •  Blanchette M  •  Yeh I  •  Shain H  •  Bastian BC  •  Song YS  •  Rokhsar DS  •  Hockemeyer D

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37932252


Journal

Nature communications

PMID:37932252

Published

November 6th, 2023