International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jun 2021)

Distinct Patterns of HBV Integration and <i>TERT</i> Alterations between in Tumor and Non-Tumor Tissue in Patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma

  • Jeong-Won Jang,
  • Hye-Seon Kim,
  • Jin-Seoub Kim,
  • Soon-Kyu Lee,
  • Ji-Won Han,
  • Pil-Soo Sung,
  • Si-Hyun Bae,
  • Jong-Young Choi,
  • Seung-Kew Yoon,
  • Dong-Jin Han,
  • Tae-Min Kim,
  • Lewis R. Roberts

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22137056
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 13
p. 7056

Abstract

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Although hepatitis B virus (HBV) integration into the cellular genome is well known in HCC (hepatocellular carcinoma) patients, its biological role still remains uncertain. This study investigated the patterns of HBV integration and correlated them with TERT (telomerase reverse transcriptase) alterations in paired tumor and non-tumor tissues. Compared to those in non-tumors, tumoral integrations occurred less frequently but with higher read counts and were more preferentially observed in genic regions with significant enrichment of integration into promoters. In HBV-related tumors, TERT promoter was identified as the most frequent site (38.5% (10/26)) of HBV integration. TERT promoter mutation was observed only in tumors (24.2% (8/33)), but not in non-tumors. Only 3.00% (34/1133) of HBV integration sites were shared between tumors and non-tumors. Within the HBV genome, HBV breakpoints were distributed preferentially in the 3’ end of HBx, with more tumoral integrations detected in the preS/S region. The major genes that were recurrently affected by HBV integration included TERT and MLL4 for tumors and FN1 for non-tumors. Functional enrichment analysis of tumoral genes with integrations showed enrichment of cancer-associated genes. The patterns and functions of HBV integration are distinct between tumors and non-tumors. Tumoral integration is often enriched into both human-virus regions with oncogenic regulatory function. The characteristic genomic features of HBV integration together with TERT alteration may dysregulate the affected gene function, thereby contributing to hepatocarcinogenesis.

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