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A map of mobile DNA insertions in the NCI-60 human cancer cell panel. Mob DNA 2016;7:20

Date

11/04/2016

Pubmed ID

27807467

Pubmed Central ID

PMC5087121

DOI

10.1186/s13100-016-0078-4

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84994180790 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   3 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The National Cancer Institute-60 (NCI-60) cell lines are among the most widely used models of human cancer. They provide a platform to integrate DNA sequence information, epigenetic data, RNA and protein expression, and pharmacologic susceptibilities in studies of cancer cell biology. Genome-wide studies of the complete panel have included exome sequencing, karyotyping, and copy number analyses but have not targeted repetitive sequences. Interspersed repeats derived from mobile DNAs are a significant source of heritable genetic variation, and insertions of active elements can occur somatically in malignancy.

METHOD: We used Transposon Insertion Profiling by microarray (TIP-chip) to map Long INterspersed Element-1 (LINE-1, L1) and Alu Short INterspersed Element (SINE) insertions in cancer genes in NCI-60 cells. We focused this discovery effort on annotated Cancer Gene Index loci.

RESULTS: We catalogued a total of 749 and 2,100 loci corresponding to candidate LINE-1 and Alu insertion sites, respectively. As expected, these numbers encompass previously known insertions, polymorphisms shared in unrelated tumor cell lines, as well as unique, potentially tumor-specific insertions. We also conducted association analyses relating individual insertions to a variety of cellular phenotypes.

CONCLUSIONS: These data provide a resource for investigators with interests in specific cancer gene loci or mobile element insertion effects more broadly. Our data underscore that significant genetic variation in cancer genomes is owed to LINE-1 and Alu retrotransposons. Our findings also indicate that as large numbers of cancer genomes become available, it will be possible to associate individual transposable element insertion variants with molecular and phenotypic features of these malignancies.

Author List

Zampella JG, Rodić N, Yang WR, Huang CR, Welch J, Gnanakkan VP, Cornish TC, Boeke JD, Burns KH

Author

Toby Charles Cornish MD, PhD Professor in the Pathology department at Medical College of Wisconsin