Cross‑species oncogenomics offers insight into human muscle‑invasive bladder cancer

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Authors

Wong, Kim
Abascal, Federico
Ludwig, Latasha
Aupperle‑Lellbach, Heike
Grassinger, Julia
Wright, Colin W.
Allison, Simon J.
Pinder, Emma
Phillips, Roger M.
Romero, Laura P.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

BMC

Abstract

BACKGROUND : In humans, muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) is highly aggressive and associated with a poor prognosis. With a high mutation load and large number of altered genes, strategies to delineate key driver events are necessary. Dogs and cats develop urothelial carcinoma (UC) with histological and clinical similarities to human MIBC. Cattle that graze on bracken fern also develop UC, associated with exposure to the carcinogen ptaquiloside. These species may represent relevant animal models of spontaneous and carcinogen-induced UC that can provide insight into human MIBC. RESULTS : Whole-exome sequencing of domestic canine (n = 87) and feline (n = 23) UC, and comparative analysis with human MIBC reveals a lower mutation rate in animal cases and the absence of APOBEC mutational signatures. A convergence of driver genes (ARID1A, KDM6A, TP53, FAT1, and NRAS) is discovered, along with common focally amplified and deleted genes involved in regulation of the cell cycle and chromatin remodelling. We identify mismatch repair deficiency in a subset of canine and feline UCs with biallelic inactivation of MSH2. Bovine UC (n = 8) is distinctly different; we identify novel mutational signatures which are recapitulated in vitro in human urinary bladder UC cells treated with bracken fern extracts or purified ptaquiloside. CONCLUSION : Canine and feline urinary bladder UC represent relevant models of MIBC in humans, and cross-species analysis can identify evolutionarily conserved driver genes. We characterize mutational signatures in bovine UC associated with bracken fern and ptaquiloside exposure, a human-linked cancer exposure. Our work demonstrates the relevance of cross-species comparative analysis in understanding both human and animal UC.

Description

AVAILABILITY OF DATA AND MATERIALS : The dataset supporting the conclusions of this article is available in the European Nucleotide Archive repository (https:// www. ebi. ac. uk/ ena/ brows er/ home), under the study accession ERP142199 [113]. Catalogs of known variants in the feline genome were obtained from the 99 Lives Cat Genome Consortium (v9, from 54 cat genomes) [88]. Catalogs of known variants in the canine genome were obtained from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) Dog Genome Project [97]. Catalogs of known variants in the bovine genome were obtained from and the 1000 Bull Genomes Project [98].

Keywords

Canine, Feline, Bovine, Urinary bladder, Cancer, Mutational signature, Bracken, Ptaquiloside, Pteridium aquilinum, Cross-species comparison, Muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), SDG-03: Good health and well-being

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being

Citation

Wong, K., Abascal, F., Ludwig, L. et al. 2023, 'Cross‑species oncogenomics offers insight into human muscle‑invasive bladder cancer', Genome Biology, vol. 24, no. 1, art. 191, pp. 1-29. https://DOI.org/10.1186/s13059-023-03026-4.