Epigenetic landscape influences the liver cancer genome architecture

Natsuko Hama(National Cancer Centre Japan), Yasushi Totoki(National Cancer Centre Japan), Fumihito Miura(Kyushu University), Kenji Tatsuno(Tokyo University of Science), Mihoko Saito-Adachi(National Cancer Centre Japan), Hiromi Nakamura(National Cancer Centre Japan), Yasuhito Arai(National Cancer Centre Japan), Fumie Hosoda(National Cancer Centre Japan), Tomoko Urushidate(The University of Tokyo), Shoko Ohashi(National Cancer Centre Japan), Wakako Mukai(National Cancer Centre Japan), Nobuyoshi Hiraoka(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Hiroyuki Aburatani(Tokyo University of Science), Takashi Ito(Kyushu University), Tatsuhiro Shibata(National Cancer Center)
Nature Communications
April 18, 2018
Cited by 57Open Access
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Abstract

The accumulations of different types of genetic alterations such as nucleotide substitutions, structural rearrangements and viral genome integrations and epigenetic alterations contribute to carcinogenesis. Here, we report correlation between the occurrence of epigenetic features and genetic aberrations by whole-genome bisulfite, whole-genome shotgun, long-read, and virus capture sequencing of 373 liver cancers. Somatic substitutions and rearrangement breakpoints are enriched in tumor-specific hypo-methylated regions with inactive chromatin marks and actively transcribed highly methylated regions in the cancer genome. Individual mutation signatures depend on chromatin status, especially, signatures with a higher transcriptional strand bias occur within active chromatic areas. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) integration sites are frequently detected within inactive chromatin regions in cancer cells, as a consequence of negative selection for integrations in active chromatin regions. Ultra-high structural instability and preserved unmethylation of integrated HBV genomes are observed. We conclude that both precancerous and somatic epigenetic features contribute to the cancer genome architecture.


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