1 / 44

Aleksandar Milosavljevic , PhD brl.bcm.tmc

Genomic DNA Variation Computer-Aided Discovery Methods Baylor College of Medicine course 311-405 Term 3, 2010/2011 Lecture on Wednesday, February 2 nd , 2011. Aleksandar Milosavljevic , PhD http://www.brl.bcm.tmc.edu. Cancer Genome Variation: Methods. Cancer Genome Variation:

dory
Download Presentation

Aleksandar Milosavljevic , PhD brl.bcm.tmc

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genomic DNA VariationComputer-Aided Discovery Methods Baylor College of Medicine course 311-405Term 3, 2010/2011Lecture on Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011 AleksandarMilosavljevic, PhD http://www.brl.bcm.tmc.edu

  2. Cancer Genome Variation: Methods

  3. Cancer Genome Variation: Sequencing Provides Comprehensive Tumor Characterization

  4. Chromosome Aberrations: References 1 of 2 Background reviews [Balmain 2001] Balmain, A., Cancer genetics: from Boveri and Mendel to microarrays. Nat Rev Cancer, 2001. 1(1): p. 77-82. [Albertson et al. 2003] Albertson, D.G., et al., Chromosome aberrations in solid tumors. Nat Genet, 2003. 34(4): p. 369-76. [Rabbitts et al. 2003] Rabbitts, T.H. and M.R. Stocks, Chromosomal translocation products engender new intracellular therapeutic technologies. Nat Med, 2003. 9(4): p. 383-6. [Kumar-Sinha et al. 2008] Kumar-Sinha, C., S. A. Tomlins, et al. (2008). "Recurrent gene fusions in prostate cancer." Nat Rev Cancer 8(7): 497-511.

  5. Chromosome Aberrations References 2 of 2 Research articles [Chin et al. 2006] Chin K. et al. Genomic and transcriptional aberrations linked to breast cancer pathophysiologies, Cancer Cell 10:529-541 2006 [Tomlins et al. 2005] Tomlins SA et al., Recurrent fusion of TMPRSS2 and ETS transcription factor genes in prostate cancer. Science, 2005. 310(5748): p. 644-8. [TCGA 2008] The Cancer Genome Atlas Network "Comprehensive genomic characterization defines human glioblastoma genes and core pathways." Nature 455(7216): 1061-1068. [Miller et al.] Miller C.A. et al. Discovering functional modules by identifyingrecurrent and mutually exclusive mutational patterns in tumors [in review].

  6. Cancer Genome Variation object of discovery pathway / module / gene set [TCGA 2008] [Miller et al.] [Chin et al. 2006] single gene [Kumar-Sinhaet al. 2008] [Tomlins et al. 2005] expression and other attributes of individual genes none networks / modules / gene sets background knowledge employed in discovery

  7. Boveri, one century ago … Multiple cell poles cause unequal segregation of chromosomes. a | Fertilization of sea-urchin eggs by two sperm results in multiple cell poles. b | Chromosomes are aberrantly segregated [Balmain 2001]

  8. Chromosomal aberrations [Albertson et al.]

  9. Chromosomal aberrations [Albertson et al.]

  10. Cancer Genome Variation: Methods

  11. (Array) Comparative Genome Hybridization (array CGH)

  12. Cancer Genome Variation object of discovery pathway / module / gene set [TCGA 2008] [Miller et al.] [Chin et al. 2006] single gene [Kumar-Sinhaet al. 2008] [Tomlins et al. 2005] expression and other attributes of individual genes none networks / modules / gene sets background knowledge employed in discovery

  13. Genomic and transcriptional aberrations linked to breast cancer pathophysiologies [Chin et al. 2006] • 100+ aggressively treated early stage breast tumors 1989-1997, before ERBB2 antagonist Trastuzumab (Herceptin) was approved for treating ERBB2+ breast cancer

  14. ERBB2 heuristic (“paradigm”) formulated in last sentence of Chin K. et al. “Taking ERBB2 as the paradigm(recurrently amplified, overexpressed,associated with outcomeand with demonstrated functional importance in cancer) suggests FGFR1, TACC1, ADAM9, IKBKB, PNMT, and GRB7 as high-priority therapeutic targets in these regions of amplification.”

  15. “Taking ERBB2 as the paradigm (recurrently amplified, overexpressed… Array CGH (~3K BAC array) Gene expression (Affymetrix U133A array)

  16. “Taking ERBB2 as the paradigm (recurrently amplified…

  17. “Taking ERBB2 as the paradigm(… associated with outcome…)

  18. “Taking ERBB2 as the paradigm(… associated with outcome…)

  19. Going beyond copy-number changes Deletions, amplifications induce aberrant fusions …but…Some aberrant fusion-producing rearrangements ( reciprocal translocations, inversions ) may not affect copy number

  20. Cancer Genome Variation object of discovery pathway / module / gene set [TCGA 2008] [Miller et al.] [Chin et al. 2006] single gene [Kumar-Sinhaet al. 2008] [Tomlins et al. 2005] expression and other attributes of individual genes none networks / modules / gene sets background knowledge employed in discovery

  21. Two significant types of aberrant fusions aberrantly amplified expression aberrant activation of signaling protein [Rabbitts et al.]

  22. BCR-ABL fusion in Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia: four decades from lesion discovery to Imatinib ( Gleevec) 1960:Philadelphia chromosome discovered 1973:Chromosome translocation t(9;22) identified 1983:Activated oncogene ABL identified 2001:Drug inhibiting BCR-ABL fusion identified

  23. Fourfold significance of recurrent chromosomal aberrations Prognostic MarkerDrug targetPointing to biological pathwayEarly diagnostic marker

  24. Case Study: Prostate Cancer [Tomlins et al. 2005] Recurrent ( > 50% cases) chromosomal aberrations discovered in leukaemias, lymphomas, and sarcomas Carcinomas more complex: -- more rearrangements -- submicroscopic structure Gene overexpression  recurrent chromosomal aberration present in > 50% prostate carcinomas [Tomlins et al. 2005]

  25. Cancer Outlier Profile Analysis (COPA) using Oncomine database reveals overexpression of ETV1 and ERG [Tomlins et al.]

  26. Frequent geneamplificationsandlosses in receptor tyrosine kinase-mediated signaling ETV1 ERG

  27. Recurrent TMPRSS2:ETV1 and TMPRSS2:ERG fusions revealed by the study of rearrangements involving ETV1 and ERG Expression of TMPRSS2 is regulated by androgen [Tomlins et al. 2005]

  28. Exclusivity of rearrangement:either ETV1 or ERG [Tomlins et al. 2005]

  29. TMPRSS2 translocation associated with: • Aggressive disease • Cancer Res 66:8347-51, 2006 • Reduced disease free survival • Cancer Biol Ther 6, 2007 • Higher rate of prostate cancer specific death • TMPRSS2:ERG gene fusion associated with lethal prostate cancer in a watchful waiting cohort. Oncogene, 2007

  30. Expanding gamut of fusions in prostate cancer [Kumar-Sinha et al. 2009]

  31. Cancer Genome Variation object of discovery pathway / module / gene set [TCGA 2008] [Miller et al.] [Chin et al. 2006] single gene [Kumar-Sinhaet al. 2008] [Tomlins et al. 2005] expression and other attributes of individual genes none networks / modules / gene sets background knowledge employed in discovery

  32. Study: aberrations in the context of interaction networks [Kumar-Sinha et al. 2008]

  33. Cancer Genome Variation object of discovery pathway / module / gene set [TCGA 2008] [Miller et al.] [Chin et al. 2006] single gene [Kumar-Sinhaet al. 2008] [Tomlins et al. 2005] expression and other attributes of individual genes none networks / modules / gene sets background knowledge employed in discovery

  34. Integrating basepair-level and copy number alterations in study of 206 glioblastoma tumors [TCGA 2008]

  35. Recurrent mutually exclusive mutational patterns identified in pathways [TCGA 2008]

  36. Cancer Genome Variation object of discovery pathway / module / gene set [TCGA 2008] [Miller et al.] [Chin et al. 2006] single gene [Kumar-Sinhaet al. 2008] [Tomlins et al. 2005] expression and other attributes of individual genes none networks / modules / gene sets background knowledge employed in discovery

  37. Hallmarks of cancer (“acquired capabilities”) are acquired by positive selection

  38. Hallmarks of cancer (“acquired capabilities”) cause recurrent mutually exclusive mutational patterns

  39. RME (“recurrent mutually exclusive”) pattern discovery algorithm

  40. RME algorithm

  41. Sensitivity and Specificity of the RME algorithm

  42. Applying RME algorithm to glioblastoma

  43. Effect of EP300 expression on survival in glioblastoma

  44. Laboratory exercise this week: array CGH ( Chia-Chin Wu) Analysis of array CGH data from a set of tumor samples using Genboree • Upload array CGH data • Perform segmentation (invoke Bioconductor tool) • Subtract polymorphisms (databases, current literature) • Identify recurrent amplifications or deletions • Study correlation with gene expression

More Related