[HTML][HTML] Widespread intron retention diversifies most cancer transcriptomes

H Dvinge, RK Bradley - Genome medicine, 2015 - Springer
H Dvinge, RK Bradley
Genome medicine, 2015Springer
Background Somatic mutations affecting components of the RNA splicing machinery occur
with high frequencies across many tumor types. These mutations give rise to distinct
alterations in normal splice site and exon recognition, such as unusual 3′ splice site
preferences, that likely contribute to tumorigenesis. Methods We analyzed genome-wide
patterns of RNA splicing across 805 matched tumor and normal control samples from 16
distinct cancer types to identify signals of abnormal cancer-associated splicing. Results We …
Background
Somatic mutations affecting components of the RNA splicing machinery occur with high frequencies across many tumor types. These mutations give rise to distinct alterations in normal splice site and exon recognition, such as unusual 3′ splice site preferences, that likely contribute to tumorigenesis.
Methods
We analyzed genome-wide patterns of RNA splicing across 805 matched tumor and normal control samples from 16 distinct cancer types to identify signals of abnormal cancer-associated splicing.
Results
We found that abnormal RNA splicing, typified by widespread intron retention, is common across cancers even in the absence of mutations directly affecting the RNA splicing machinery. Almost all liquid and solid cancer types exhibited frequent retention of both alternative and constitutive introns relative to control normal tissues. The sole exception was breast cancer, where intron retention typified adjacent normal rather than cancer tissue. Different introns were preferentially retained in specific cancer types, although a small subset of introns enriched for genes encoding RNA splicing and export factors exhibited frequent retention across diverse cancers. The extent of intron retention correlated with the presence of IDH1 and IDH2 mutations in acute myeloid leukemia and across molecular subtypes in breast cancer. Many introns that were preferentially retained in primary cancers were present at high levels in the cytoplasmic mRNA pools of cancer cell lines.
Conclusions
Our data indicate that abnormal RNA splicing is a common characteristic of cancers even in the absence of mutational insults to the splicing machinery, and suggest that intron-containing mRNAs contribute to the transcriptional diversity of many cancers.
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