Leveraging new methods for comprehensive characterization of mitochondrial DNA in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
-
Published:2024-04-02
Issue:1
Volume:16
Page:
-
ISSN:1756-994X
-
Container-title:Genome Medicine
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Genome Med
Author:
Zhuang Xuehan,Ye Rui,Zhou Yong,Cheng Matthew Yibo,Cui Heyang,Wang Longlong,Zhang Shuangping,Wang Shubin,Cui Yongping,Zhang Weimin
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Mitochondria play essential roles in tumorigenesis; however, little is known about the contribution of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) to esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is by far the most efficient technology to fully characterize the molecular features of mtDNA; however, due to the high redundancy and heterogeneity of mtDNA in regular WGS data, methods for mtDNA analysis are far from satisfactory.
Methods
Here, we developed a likelihood-based method dMTLV to identify low-heteroplasmic mtDNA variants. In addition, we described fNUMT, which can simultaneously detect non-reference nuclear sequences of mitochondrial origin (non-ref NUMTs) and their derived artifacts. Using these new methods, we explored the contribution of mtDNA to ESCC utilizing the multi-omics data of 663 paired tumor-normal samples.
Results
dMTLV outperformed the existing methods in sensitivity without sacrificing specificity. The verification using Nanopore long-read sequencing data showed that fNUMT has superior specificity and more accurate breakpoint identification than the current methods.
Leveraging the new method, we identified a significant association between the ESCC overall survival and the ratio of mtDNA copy number of paired tumor-normal samples, which could be potentially explained by the differential expression of genes enriched in pathways related to metabolism, DNA damage repair, and cell cycle checkpoint. Additionally, we observed that the expression of CBWD1 was downregulated by the non-ref NUMTs inserted into its intron region, which might provide precursor conditions for the tumor cells to adapt to a hypoxic environment. Moreover, we identified a strong positive relationship between the number of mtDNA truncating mutations and the contribution of signatures linked to tumorigenesis and treatment response.
Conclusions
Our new frameworks promote the characterization of mtDNA features, which enables the elucidation of the landscapes and roles of mtDNA in ESCC essential for extending the current understanding of ESCC etiology. dMTLV and fNUMT are freely available from https://github.com/sunnyzxh/dMTLV and https://github.com/sunnyzxh/fNUMT, respectively.
Funder
Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation
the National Key R&D Program of China
Major Program of Shenzhen Bay Laboratory
Shenzhen Key Project of Science and Technology
Shenzhen Medical Research Funds
the National Natural Science Foundation of China
Shenzhen “San-Ming” Project of Medicine
Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Commission Project
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC