A single-cell strategy for the identification of intronic variants related to mis-splicing in pancreatic cancer

Author:

Duman Emre Taylan1ORCID,Sitte Maren1ORCID,Conrads Karly234ORCID,Mackay Adi35ORCID,Ludewig Fabian1,Ströbel Philipp35ORCID,Ellenrieder Volker236,Hessmann Elisabeth236,Papantonis Argyris356ORCID,Salinas Gabriela13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. NGS-Core Unit for Integrative Genomics, Institute of Pathology, University Medical Center , Göttingen , Germany

2. Clinic of Gastroenterology, Gastrointestinal Oncology and Endocrinology, University Medical Center , Göttingen , Germany

3. Clinical Research Unit 5002 (CRU5002), University Medical Center , Göttingen , Germany

4. Institute of Medical Bioinformatics, University Medical Center , Göttingen , Germany

5. Institute of Pathology, University Medical Center , Göttingen , Germany

6. Comprehensive Cancer Center Lower Saxony (CCC-N) , Göttingen , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Most clinical diagnostic and genomic research setups focus almost exclusively on coding regions and essential splice sites, thereby overlooking other non-coding variants. As a result, intronic variants that can promote mis-splicing events across a range of diseases, including cancer, are yet to be systematically investigated. Such investigations would require both genomic and transcriptomic data, but there currently exist very few datasets that satisfy these requirements. We address this by developing a single-nucleus full-length RNA-sequencing approach that allows for the detection of potentially pathogenic intronic variants. We exemplify the potency of our approach by applying pancreatic cancer tumor and tumor-derived specimens and linking intronic variants to splicing dysregulation. We specifically find that prominent intron retention and pseudo-exon activation events are shared by the tumors and affect genes encoding key transcriptional regulators. Our work paves the way for the assessment and exploitation of intronic mutations as powerful prognostic markers and potential therapeutic targets in cancer.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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