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Scientists find new Genes linked to Lung
Cancer
Newswise — Working as part of
a multi-institutional collaboration,
scientists at Washington University School
of Medicine in St. Louis have assembled the
most complete catalog to date of the genetic
changes underlying the most common form of
lung cancer.
The research, published Oct.
23 in Nature, helps lay the foundation for
more personalized diagnosis and treatment of
a disease that is the leading cause of U.S.
cancer deaths.
The research team identified
26 genes that are frequently mutated in a
type of cancer called lung adenocarcinoma, a
finding that more than doubles the number of
genes already known to be linked to the
deadly disease.
What's more, by casting a
wide net in their search for genetic
alterations, the scientists are now
beginning to see intriguing relationships.
They found that some of the
same genes associated with lung tumors are
also defective in other cancers, that
smokers and non-smokers with lung cancer
have distinct genetic defects and that
several molecular pathways underlie most of
the mutations.
"This genomic approach has
given us a completely different view of lung
cancer," says Richard K. Wilson, Ph.D.,
director of Washington University's Genome
Sequencing Center and one of the study's
lead authors.
"This broad view will allow
scientists to more accurately categorize
tumors, which should speed efforts to
develop more targeted therapies to fight the
disease."
More than 1 million people
worldwide die of lung cancer each year,
including more than 160,000 in the United
States. About 40 percent of them are
adenocarcinoma, a type of non-small cell
lung cancer and one that is exceedingly
difficult to treat. Only about 15 percent of
patients are still alive five years after
diagnosis.
"By harnessing the power of
genomic research, this pioneering work has
painted the clearest and most complete
portrait yet of lung cancer's molecular
complexities," says Alan E. Guttmacher,
M.D., acting director of the National Human
Genome Research Institute, the agency that
funded the research.
The Nature study was
conducted as part of the Tumor Sequencing
Project, a collaborative effort to assemble
a genome-wide catalog of the genetic
mutations in lung adenocarcinoma.
Like most cancers, lung
adenocarcinoma arises from changes that
accumulate in people's DNA over the course
of their lives.
However, little is known
about the precise nature of these genetic
alterations, how they occur and how they
disrupt biological pathways to cause
cancer's unfettered cell growth.
Working with lung cancer
samples donated by 188 patients from across
the United States, the group sequenced 623
suspect genes and compared them to the same
genes in healthy tissues from the same
patients.
Initially, they found more
than 1,000 mutations across the samples.
Looking more closely, the researchers
identified 26 genes mutated in a significant
number of samples.
Most of the genes had not
previously been associated with lung cancer
but are found in other tumors.
The new genes fingered in
lung adenocarcinoma include:
Neurofibromastosis 1:
Mutations in this gene cause a rare
inherited neurological disorder that
increases the risk of tumors that form on
nerve tissues, including the brain, spinal
cord and individual nerves;
Ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM):
Mutations of this gene have been found in a
rare inherited neurological disorder and in
various types of leukemia and lymphoma;
Retinoblastoma 1: Mutations in this gene
have linked to a rare childhood cancer that
begins in the retina;
Adenomatosis polyposis coli (APC): Mutations
of this gene are common in colon cancer.
The team also examined the effects of the
genetic mutations on biological pathways and
determined which of the pathways is most
crucial to lung adenocarcinoma. This line of
discovery is essential to efforts to develop
new and better treatments for cancer.
For example, the researchers
discovered that more than 70 percent of the
188 tumors had at least one mutation
affecting the mitogen-activated protein
kinase (MAPK) pathway, indicating it plays a
pivotal role in lung cancer.
Based on those findings, the
researchers suggested new treatment
strategies for some subtypes of lung
adenocarcinoma might include compounds that
affect this pathway.
One such group of compounds,
the MEK inhibitors, has produced promising
results in mouse models of lung cancer.
"Looking at the pathways
helps simplify the picture," Wilson
explains.
"Generally, we found that
each mutation only occurs in a small
percentage of the tumor samples, but when we
looked at all the mutations that intersect a
particular signaling pathway, we were
surprised to find a lot of overlap in only a
handful of pathways.
"This
gives us a much better idea of what goes
wrong in cells when they become cancerous."
Additionally, the finding
that more than 30 percent of tumors had
mutations affecting the rapamycin (mTOR)
pathway raises the possibility that the drug
rapamycin might be tested in lung
adenocarcinoma. The drug, which inhibits
mTOR, is approved for use in organ
transplants and renal cancer.
The researchers also analyzed
the patterns of genetic changes in both
smokers and non-smokers with lung cancer.
About 90 percent of lung
cancer is linked to smoking, but 10 percent
of patients diagnosed with the disease have
never smoked.
They found that the number of
mutations detected in tumor samples from
smokers was significantly higher than in
tumors from never-smokers. Smokers' tumors
contained as many as 49 mutations, while
none of the never-smokers' tumors had more
than five.
More work is needed to
determine the clinical significance of these
differences. However, doctors do know that
in some other types of cancer, high mutation
levels may cause a tumor to spread rapidly
or be resistant to treatment.
The study also confirmed
previous observations that indicated lung
cancer in never-smokers may be triggered by
different genetic mutations than those in
smokers.
For example, mutations in the
epidermal growth factor (EGFR) gene were
prevalent in tumors from non-smokers, while
mutations in the KRAS and Src tyrosine
kinase 11 genes were common in tumors from
smokers.
"Our findings underscore the
value of systematic, large-scale genome
studies for exploring cancer.
"We
now must move forward to apply this approach
to even larger groups of samples and a wider
range of cancers," Wilson says.
The Tumor Sequencing Project
also included researchers from Baylor
College of Medicine, Houston; Brigham and
Women's Hospital, Boston; Broad Institute of
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge; Harvard Medical School, Boston;
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New
York; the University of Cologne, Germany;
the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; and
the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer
Center, Houston.
Data from the Tumor
Sequencing Project are complementary to The
Cancer Genome Atlas project, of which
Washington University also plays a leading
role.
That project, funded by the
National Human Genome Research Institute and
the National Cancer Institute, initially is
focusing on glioblastoma, the most common
form of brain tumor, lung cancer and ovarian
cancer.
The first results from The
Cancer Genome Atlas project's glioblastoma
study were published in the advance online
edition of Nature on Sept. 4 and published
in Nature's print edition on Oct. 23.
In the glioblastoma study,
Washington University scientists and others
analyzed the complete genomes of tumor
samples donated by 206 patients with
glioblastoma.
They identified numerous
genetic mutations involved in the disease,
including three previously unrecognized
mutations that occur frequently, and defined
core molecular pathways that are disrupted.
The team also uncovered a
potential mechanism of resistance to a
common chemotherapy drug used for brain
cancer.
The lung and brain tumor
studies were funded by the National Human
Genome Research Institute.
Washington University School
of Medicine's 2,100 employed and volunteer
faculty physicians also are the medical
staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis
Children's hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one
of the leading medical research, teaching
and patient care institutions in the nation,
currently ranked fourth in the nation by
U.S. News & World Report.
Through its affiliations with
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked
to BJC HealthCare.
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