Machine learning enables pan-cancer identification of mutational hotspots at persistent CTCF binding sites

Author:

Chen Wenhan1,Zeng Yi C23ORCID,Achinger-Kawecka Joanna13ORCID,Campbell Elyssa1ORCID,Jones Alicia K1,Stewart Alastair G23ORCID,Khoury Amanda13ORCID,Clark Susan J13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Epigenetics Laboratory, Garvan Institute of Medical Research , Sydney 2010  New South Wales , Australia

2. Structural Biology Laboratory, Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute , Sydney 2010 New South Wales,  Australia

3. St Vincent's Clinical School, UNSW , Sydney 2010 New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

Abstract CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) is an insulator protein that binds to a highly conserved DNA motif and facilitates regulation of three-dimensional (3D) nuclear architecture and transcription. CTCF binding sites (CTCF-BSs) reside in non-coding DNA and are frequently mutated in cancer. Our previous study identified a small subclass of CTCF-BSs that are resistant to CTCF knock down, termed persistent CTCF binding sites (P-CTCF-BSs). P-CTCF-BSs show high binding conservation and potentially regulate cell-type constitutive 3D chromatin architecture. Here, using ICGC sequencing data we made the striking observation that P-CTCF-BSs display a highly elevated mutation rate in breast and prostate cancer when compared to all CTCF-BSs. To address whether P-CTCF-BS mutations are also enriched in other cell-types, we developed CTCF-INSITE—a tool utilising machine learning to predict persistence based on genetic and epigenetic features of experimentally-determined P-CTCF-BSs. Notably, predicted P-CTCF-BSs also show a significantly elevated mutational burden in all 12 cancer-types tested. Enrichment was even stronger for P-CTCF-BS mutations with predicted functional impact to CTCF binding and chromatin looping. Using in vitro binding assays we validated that P-CTCF-BS cancer mutations, predicted to be disruptive, indeed reduced CTCF binding. Together this study reveals a new subclass of cancer specific CTCF-BS DNA mutations and provides insights into their importance in genome organization in a pan-cancer setting.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

NHMRC Ideas

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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