Login / Signup

Mutually exclusive genetic interactions and gene essentiality shape the genomic landscape of primary melanoma.

Sofia BirkeälvMark HarlandLarissa Satiko Alcantara Sekimoto MatsuyamaMamun RashidIshan MehtaJonathan P LayeKerstin HaaseTracey MellVivek IyerCarla Daniela Robles-EspinozaUltan McDermottPeter van LooMarieke L KuijjerPatricia A PossikSilvya Stuchi Maria EnglerD Timothy BishopJulia Newton-BishopDavid J Adams
Published in: The Journal of pathology (2022)
Melanoma is a heterogenous malignancy with an unpredictable clinical course. Most patients who present in the clinic are diagnosed with primary melanoma, yet large-scale sequencing efforts have focused primarily on metastatic disease. In this study we sequence-profiled 524 American Joint Committee on Cancer Stage I-III primary tumours. Our analysis of these data reveals recurrent driver mutations, mutually exclusive genetic interactions, where two genes were never or rarely co-mutated, and an absence of co-occurring genetic events. Further, we intersected copy number calls from our primary melanoma data with whole-genome CRISPR screening data to identify the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) as a melanoma-associated dependency. © 2022 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
Keyphrases