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DOI: 10.1038/nature09744
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

The genomic complexity of primary human prostate cancer

Michael F. Berger,Michael S. Lawrence,Francesca Demichelis,Yotam Drier,Kristian Cibulskis,Andrey Sivachenko,Andrea Sboner,Raquel Esgueva,Dorothee Pflueger,Carrie Sougnez,Robert C. Onofrio,Scott L. Carter,Kyung Park,Lukas Habegger,Lauren Ambrogio,Timothy Fennell,Melissa Parkin,Gordon Saksena,Douglas Voet,Alex H. Ramos,Trevor J. Pugh,Jane Wilkinson,Sheila Fisher,Wendy Winckler,Scott Mahan,Kristin Ardlie,Jennifer Baldwin,Jonathan W. Simons,Naoki Kitabayashi,Theresa Y. MacDonald,Philip W. Kantoff,Lynda Chin,Stacey Gabriel,Mark Gerstein,Todd R. Golub,Matthew Meyerson,Ashutosh Tewari,Eric S. Lander,Gad Getz,Mark A. Rubin,Levi A. Garraway

Chromoplexy
Prostate cancer
PTEN
2011
Prostate cancer is the second most common cause of male cancer deaths in the United States. However, the full range of prostate cancer genomic alterations is incompletely characterized. Here we present the complete sequence of seven primary human prostate cancers and their paired normal counterparts. Several tumours contained complex chains of balanced (that is, 'copy-neutral') rearrangements that occurred within or adjacent to known cancer genes. Rearrangement breakpoints were enriched near open chromatin, androgen receptor and ERG DNA binding sites in the setting of the ETS gene fusion TMPRSS2-ERG, but inversely correlated with these regions in tumours lacking ETS fusions. This observation suggests a link between chromatin or transcriptional regulation and the genesis of genomic aberrations. Three tumours contained rearrangements that disrupted CADM2, and four harboured events disrupting either PTEN (unbalanced events), a prostate tumour suppressor, or MAGI2 (balanced events), a PTEN interacting protein not previously implicated in prostate tumorigenesis. Thus, genomic rearrangements may arise from transcriptional or chromatin aberrancies and engage prostate tumorigenic mechanisms.
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    The genomic complexity of primary human prostate cancer” is a paper by Michael F. Berger Michael S. Lawrence Francesca Demichelis Yotam Drier Kristian Cibulskis Andrey Sivachenko Andrea Sboner Raquel Esgueva Dorothee Pflueger Carrie Sougnez Robert C. Onofrio Scott L. Carter Kyung Park Lukas Habegger Lauren Ambrogio Timothy Fennell Melissa Parkin Gordon Saksena Douglas Voet Alex H. Ramos Trevor J. Pugh Jane Wilkinson Sheila Fisher Wendy Winckler Scott Mahan Kristin Ardlie Jennifer Baldwin Jonathan W. Simons Naoki Kitabayashi Theresa Y. MacDonald Philip W. Kantoff Lynda Chin Stacey Gabriel Mark Gerstein Todd R. Golub Matthew Meyerson Ashutosh Tewari Eric S. Lander Gad Getz Mark A. Rubin Levi A. Garraway published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.