Scientific Reports (Jan 2023)

PIK3CA is recurrently mutated in canine mammary tumors, similarly to in human mammary neoplasia

  • Maja Louise Arendt,
  • Sharadha Sakthikumar,
  • Malin Melin,
  • Ingegerd Elvers,
  • Patricio Rivera,
  • Majbritt Larsen,
  • Sara Saellström,
  • Frode Lingaas,
  • Henrik Rönnberg,
  • Kerstin Lindblad-Toh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-27664-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Biological features of neoplastic disease affecting mammary gland tissue are shared between canines and humans. Research performed in either species has translational value and early phase clinical trials performed in canines with spontaneous disease could be informative for human trials. The purpose of this study was to investigate the somatic genetic aberrations occurring in canine mammary neoplasia by exome capture and next generation sequencing. Based on 55 tumor-normal pairs we identified the PIK3CA gene as the most commonly mutated gene in canine mammary tumors, with 25% of samples carrying mutations in this gene. A recurrent missense mutation was identified, p.H1047R, which is homologous to the human PIK3CA hotspot mutation found in different types of breast neoplasia. Mutations homologous to other known human mutation hotspots such as the PIK3CA p.E545K and the KRAS p.G12V/D were also identified. We identified copy number aberrations affecting important tumor suppressor and oncogenic pathways including deletions affecting the PTEN tumor suppressor gene. We suggest that activation of the KRAS or PIK3CA oncogenes or loss of the PTEN suppressor gene may be important for mammary tumor development in dogs. This data endorses the conservation of cancer across species and the validity of studying cancer in non-human species.