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Germline TP53 mutations undergo copy number gain years prior to tumor diagnosis.

Nicholas LightMehdi LayeghifardAyush AtteryVallijah SubasriMatthew ZatzmanNathaniel D AndersonRupal HatkarSasha BlayDavid ChenAna NovokmetFabio FuligniJames TranRichard de BorjaHimanshi AgarwalLarissa WaldmanLisa M AbegglenDaniel AlbertsonJonathan L FinlayJordan R HansfordSam BehjatiAnita VillaniMoritz GerstungLudmil B AlexandrovGino R SomersJoshua D SchiffmanVarda RotterDavid MalkinAdam Shlien
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) is a hereditary cancer predisposition syndrome associated with germline TP53 pathogenic variants. Here, we perform whole-genome sequence (WGS) analysis of tumors from 22 patients with TP53 germline pathogenic variants. We observe somatic mutations affecting Wnt, PI3K/AKT signaling, epigenetic modifiers and homologous recombination genes as well as mutational signatures associated with prior chemotherapy. We identify near-ubiquitous early loss of heterozygosity of TP53, with gain of the mutant allele. This occurs earlier in these tumors compared to tumors with somatic TP53 mutations, suggesting the timing of this mark may distinguish germline from somatic TP53 mutations. Phylogenetic trees of tumor evolution, reconstructed from bulk and multi-region WGS, reveal that LFS tumors exhibit comparatively limited heterogeneity. Overall, our study delineates early copy number gains of mutant TP53 as a characteristic mutational process in LFS tumorigenesis, likely arising years prior to tumor diagnosis.
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