Non-coding cancer driver candidates identified with a sample- and position-specific model of the somatic mutation rate

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Abstract

Non-coding mutations may drive cancer development. Statistical detection of non- coding driver regions is challenged by a varying mutation rate and uncertainty of functional impact. Here, we develop a statistically founded non-coding driver-detection method, ncdDetect, which includes sample-specific mutational signatures, long-range mutation rate variation, and position-specific impact measures. Using ncdDetect, we screened non-coding regulatory regions of protein-coding genes across a pan-cancer set of whole-genomes (n = 505), which top-ranked known drivers and identified new candidates. For individual candidates, presence of non-coding mutations associates with altered expression or decreased patient survival across an independent pan-cancer sample set (n = 5454). This includes an antigen-presenting gene (CD1A), where 5’UTR mutations correlate significantly with decreased survival in melanoma. Additionally, mutations in a base-excision-repair gene (SMUG1) correlate with a C-to-T mutational-signature. Overall, we find that a rich model of mutational heterogeneity facilitates non-coding driver identification and integrative analysis points to candidates of potential clinical relevance.

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APA

Juul, M., Bertl, J., Guo, Q., Nielsen, M. M., Świtnicki, M., Hornshøj, H., … Pedersen, J. S. (2017). Non-coding cancer driver candidates identified with a sample- and position-specific model of the somatic mutation rate. ELife, 6. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21778

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