Risk of lung adenocarcinoma from smoking and radiation arises in distinct molecular pathways

Author:

Castelletti Noemi1ORCID,Kaiser Jan Christian1,Simonetto Cristoforo1,Furukawa Kyoji2,Küchenhoff Helmut3,Stathopoulos Georgios T45

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Radiation Medicine (IRM), Helmholtz Zentrum München, Neuherberg, Bavaria, Germany

2. Biostatistics Center, Kurume University, Asahi-machi, Kurume, Japan

3. Department of Statistics, Ludwig-Maximilian University (LMU) Munich, Munich, Bavaria, Germany

4. Laboratory for Molecular Respiratory Carcinogenesis, Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine; University of Patras; Rio, Achaia, Greece

5. Comprehensive Pneumology Center (CPC) and Institute for Lung Biology and Disease (iLBD), University Hospital, Ludwig-Maximilian University (LMU) and Helmholtz Zentrum München, Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), Munich, Bavaria, Germany

Abstract

Abstract KRAS mutations of lung adenocarcinoma (LADC) are associated with smoking but little is known on other exposure-oncogene associations. Hypothesizing that different inciting agents may cause different driver mutations, we aimed to identify distinct molecular pathways to LADC, applying two entirely different approaches. First, we examined clinicopathologic features and genomic signatures of environmental exposures in the large LADC Campbell data set. Second, we designed a molecular mechanistic risk model of LADC (M3LADC) that links environmental exposure to incidence risk by mathematically emulating the disease process. This model was applied to incidence data of Japanese atom-bomb survivors which contains information on radiation and smoking exposure. Grouping the clinical data by driver mutations revealed two main distinct molecular pathways to LADC: one unique to transmembrane receptor-mutant patients that displayed robust signatures of radiation exposure and one shared between submembrane transducer-mutant patients and patients with no evident driver mutation that carried the signature of smoking. Consistently, best fit of the incidence data was achieved with a M3LADC with two pathways: in one LADC risk increased with radiation exposure and in the other with cigarette consumption. We conclude there are two main molecular pathways to LADC associated with different environmental exposures. Future molecular measurements in lung cancer tissue of atom-bomb survivors may allow to further test quantitatively the M3LADC-predicted link of radiation to transmembrane receptor mutations. Moreover, the developed molecular mechanistic model showed that for low doses, as relevant e.g. for medical imaging, smokers have the same radiation risk compared with never smokers.

Funder

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Kompetenzverbund Strahlenforschung

European Research Council Starting Independent Investigator

Proof of Concept Grants

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,General Medicine

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