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Lund University Lund University Publications2000-01-01T00:00+00:001dailyDisruption of the TP53 locus in osteosarcoma leads to TP53 promoter gene fusions and restoration of parts of the TP53 signalling pathway
https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/publication/82849948-b87a-4817-ab39-d7e6d30a32c9
Saba, Karim H.Difilippo, ValeriaKovac, MichalCornmark, LouiseMagnusson, LindaNilsson, Jennyvan den Bos, HildaSpierings, Diana C.J.Bidgoli, MahtabJonson, TordSumathi, Vaiyapuri P.Brosjö, OtteStaaf, JohanFoijer, FlorisStyring, EmelieNathrath, MichaelaBaumhoer, DanielNord, Karolin H.2023TP53 is the most frequently mutated gene in human cancer. This gene shows not only loss-of-function mutations but also recurrent missense mutations with gain-of-function activity. We have studied the primary bone malignancy osteosarcoma, which harbours one of the most rearranged genomes of all cancers. This is odd since it primarily affects children and adolescents who have not lived the long life thought necessary to accumulate massive numbers of mutations. In osteosarcoma, TP53 is often disrupted by structural variants. Here, we show through combined whole-genome and transcriptome analyses of 148 osteosarcomas that TP53 structural variants commonly result in loss of coding parts of the gene while simultaneously preserving and relocating the promoter region. The transferred TP53 promoter region is fused to genes previously implicated in cancer development. Paradoxically, these erroneously upregulated genes are significantly associated with the TP53 signalling pathway itself. This suggests that while the classical tumour suppressor activities of TP53 are lost, certain parts of the TP53 signalling pathway that are necessary for cancer cell survival and proliferation are retained. In line with this, our data suggest that transposition of the TP53 promoter is an early event that allows for a new normal state of genome-wide rearrangements in osteosarcoma.https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/82849948-b87a-4817-ab39-d7e6d30a32c9http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/path.6219pmid:38010733scopus:85177795163engJournal of Pathology; pp 147-160 (2023)ISSN: 0022-3417Medical Geneticsgene fusionosteosarcomap53promoter swappingseparation-of-function mutationTP53 intron 1TP53 mutationTP53 promoterTP53 signalling pathwayDisruption of the TP53 locus in osteosarcoma leads to TP53 promoter gene fusions and restoration of parts of the TP53 signalling pathwaycontributiontojournal/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articletext