Author:
Hayashi Yujiro,Fujita Kazutoshi,Sakai Kazuko,Adomi Shogo,Banno Eri,Nojima Satoshi,Tomiyama Eisuke,Matsushita Makoto,Kato Taigo,Hatano Koji,Kawashima Atsunari,Minami Takafumi,Morii Eiichi,Uemura Hirotsugu,Nishio Kazuto,Nonomura Norio
Abstract
AbstractDuring tumorigenesis, certain tissues are colonized by mutant clones with oncogenic driver mutations as precancer lesions. These mutations can facilitate clonal expansion and may contribute to malignant transformation. The molecular features of low-grade non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) and high-grade bladder cancer are so distinct that they are thought to follow different evolutionary tumorigenesis pathways. Although NMIBC accounts for most bladder tumors, the somatic mutation patterns in “precancer” urothelium of patients with NMIBC remain unclear. Here, we analyzed specimens of normal urothelium and bladder tumors from patients with low-grade and high-grade NMIBC and investigated the genomic evolution of the cancer. Somatic mutations were analyzed using 50 oncogene-targeted sequences and droplet digital polymerase chain reaction for TERT promoter mutations. Somatic mutations in TERT promoter, FGFR3, and CDKN2A were characteristically identified in the normal urothelium of patients with NMIBC. These mutations, consistently identified in both tumor and normal specimens, likely affect clonal expansion during the malignant transformation of NMIBC. Though larger samples and comprehensive study are warranted to confirm our results, the difference in mutational landscape of the precancerous urothelium of patients with bladder cancer could offer deeper understandings of genomic evolution in bladder tumorigenesis.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Young Research Grant from The Japanese Urological Association
Kobayashi Foundation for Cancer Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
4 articles.
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