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Patterns of somatic genome rearrangement in human cancer


Type

Thesis

Change log

Authors

Roberts, Nicola Diane  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0469-1043

Abstract

Cancer development is driven by somatic genome alterations, ranging from single point mutations to larger structural variants (SV) affecting kilobases to megabases of one or more chromosomes. Studies of somatic rearrangement have previously been limited by a paucity of whole genome sequencing data, and a lack of methods for comprehensive structural classification and downstream analysis. The ICGC project on the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes provides an unprecedented opportunity to analyse somatic SVs at base-pair resolution in more than 2500 samples from 30 common cancer types.

In this thesis, I build on a recently developed SV classification pipeline to present a census of rearrangement across the pan-cancer cohort, including chromoplexy, replicative two-jumps, and templated insertions connecting as many as eight distant loci. By identifying the precise structure of individual breakpoint junctions and separating out complex clusters, the classification scheme empowers detailed exploration of all simple SV properties and signatures.

After illustrating the various SV classes and their frequency across cancer types and samples, Chapter 2 focuses on structural properties including event size and breakpoint homology. Then, in Chapter 3, I consider the SV distribution across the genome, and show patterns of association with various genome properties. Upon examination of rearrangement hotspot loci, I describe tissue-specific fragile site deletion patterns, and a variety of SV profiles around known cancer genes, including recurrent templated insertion cycles affecting TERT and RB1.

Turning to co-occurring alteration patterns, Chapter 4 introduces the Hierarchical Dirichlet Process as a non-parametric Bayesian model of mutational signatures. After developing methods for consensus signature extraction, I detour to the domain of single nucleotide variants to test the HDP method on real and simulated data, and to illustrate its utility for simultaneous signature discovery and matching. Finally, I return to the PCAWG SV dataset, and extract SV signatures delineated by structural class, size, and replication timing.

In Chapter 5, I move on to the complex SV clusters (largely set aside throughout Chapters 2—4) , and develop an improved breakpoint clustering method to subdivide the complex rearrangement landscape. I propose a raft of summary metrics for groups of five or more breakpoint junctions, and explore their utility for preliminary classification of chromothripsis and other complex phenomena.

This comprehensive study of somatic genome rearrangement provides detailed insight into SV patterns and properties across event classes, genome regions, samples, and cancer types. To extrapolate from the progress made in this thesis, Chapter 6 suggests future strategies for addressing unanswered questions about complex SV mechanisms, annotation of functional consequences, and selection analysis to discover novel drivers of the cancer phenotype.

Description

Date

2018-01-26

Advisors

Campbell, Peter

Keywords

cancer, genome, genomics, cancer genomics, structural variation, genome rearrangement, bioinformatics, pan-cancer analysis, hierarchical dirichlet process, mutational signatures

Qualification

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Awarding Institution

University of Cambridge
Sponsorship
PhD studentship awarded by the Wellcome Trust