Integrative genomic and gene expression analysis of chromosome 7 identified novel oncogene loci in non-small cell lung cancer

JM Campbell, WW Lockwood, TPH Buys, R Chari… - …, 2008 - cdnsciencepub.com
JM Campbell, WW Lockwood, TPH Buys, R Chari, BP Coe, S Lam, WL Lam
Genome, 2008cdnsciencepub.com
Lung cancer accounts for over a quarter of cancer deaths, with non-small cell lung cancer
(NSCLC) accounting for approximately 80% of cases. Several genome studies have been
undertaken in both cell models of NSCLC and clinical samples to identify alterations
underlying disease behaviour, and many have identified recurring aberrations of
chromosome 7. The presence of recurring chromosome 7 alterations that do not span the
well-studied oncogenes EGFR (at 7p11. 2) and MET (at 7q31. 2) has raised the hypothesis …
Lung cancer accounts for over a quarter of cancer deaths, with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounting for approximately 80% of cases. Several genome studies have been undertaken in both cell models of NSCLC and clinical samples to identify alterations underlying disease behaviour, and many have identified recurring aberrations of chromosome 7. The presence of recurring chromosome 7 alterations that do not span the well-studied oncogenes EGFR (at 7p11.2) and MET (at 7q31.2) has raised the hypothesis of additional genes on this chromosome that contribute to tumourigenesis. In this study, we demonstrated that multiple loci on chromosome 7 are indeed amplified in NSCLC, and through integrative analysis of gene dosage alterations and parallel gene expression changes, we identified new lung cancer oncogene candidates, including FTSJ2, NUDT1, TAF6, and POLR2J. Activation of these key genes was confirmed in panels of clinical lung tumour tissue as compared with matched normal lung tissue. The detection of gene activation in multiple cohorts of samples strongly supports the presence of key genes involved in lung cancer that are distinct from the EGFR and MET loci on chromosome 7.
Canadian Science Publishing