Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology (Jan 2023)

High-Resolution Genomic Profiling of Liver Cancer Links Etiology With Mutation and Epigenetic SignaturesSummary

  • Shira Perez,
  • Anat Lavi-Itzkovitz,
  • Moriah Gidoni,
  • Tom Domovitz,
  • Roba Dabour,
  • Ishant Khurana,
  • Ateret Davidovich,
  • Ana Tobar,
  • Alejandro Livoff,
  • Evgeny Solomonov,
  • Yaakov Maman,
  • Assam El-Osta,
  • Yishan Tsai,
  • Ming-Lung Yu,
  • Salomon M. Stemmer,
  • Izhak Haviv,
  • Gur Yaari,
  • Meital Gal-Tanamy

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 63 – 81

Abstract

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Background & Aims: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a model of a diverse spectrum of cancers because it is induced by well-known etiologies, mainly hepatitis C virus (HCV) and hepatitis B virus. Here, we aimed to identify HCV-specific mutational signatures and explored the link between the HCV-related regional variation in mutations rates and HCV-induced alterations in genome-wide chromatin organization. Methods: To identify an HCV-specific mutational signature in HCC, we performed high-resolution targeted sequencing to detect passenger mutations on 64 HCC samples from 3 etiology groups: hepatitis B virus, HCV, or other. To explore the link between the genomic signature and genome-wide chromatin organization we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing for the transcriptionally permissive H3K4Me3, H3K9Ac, and suppressive H3K9Me3 modifications after HCV infection. Results: Regional variation in mutation rate analysis showed significant etiology-dependent regional mutation rates in 12 genes: LRP2, KRT84, TMEM132B, DOCK2, DMD, INADL, JAK2, DNAH6, MTMR9, ATM, SLX4, and ARSD. We found an enrichment of C->T transversion mutations in the HCV-associated HCC cases. Furthermore, these cases showed regional variation in mutation rates associated with genomic intervals in which HCV infection dictated epigenetic alterations. This signature may be related to the HCV-induced decreased expression of genes encoding key enzymes in the base excision repair pathway. Conclusions: We identified novel distinct HCV etiology-dependent mutation signatures in HCC associated with HCV-induced alterations in histone modification. This study presents a link between cancer-causing mutagenesis and the increased predisposition to liver cancer in chronic HCV-infected individuals, and unveils novel etiology-specific mechanisms leading to HCC and cancer in general.

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