1 Irinotecan pathway -102 -30 -24 DES desmin chr2q35 Muscle contraction Genomic Alterations in Biliary Carcinogenesis To better understand the molecular pathogenesis of biliary tract cancers we used an array based CGH analysis to detect A-1155463 clinical trial Chromosomal areas of DNA copy number gain (DNA copy number of 3 or
greater) and loss (DNA copy number of 0 or 1) in the GBC, IHC, and EHC specimens. Figure 2a depicts the chromosomal alterations for each individual cancer specimen while Figure 2b–d represents cumulative summaries of the chromosomal changes for each cancer subtype. Cumulative chromosomal changes for all biliary tract cancers combined are shown in Figure selleck kinase inhibitor 2e. Figure 2 Chromosomal Structural Mutations in Biliary
Tract Cancers. (a) A cumulative depiction of the copy number changes across the genome for all biliary cancer specimens is shown. Chromosomal number is listed on the left. Amplification is depicted in red and deletion in blue. White is unchanged from genomic DNA controls. Increased amplification or deletion within a cancer specimen is reflected in increased color intensity. The percentage of patient specimens that have either amplifications or deletions at each chromosomal loci is shown for (b) AP26113 EHC, (c) IHC, (d) GBC, and (e) all biliary tract cancers combined. Overall, patients with GBC exhibited the greatest genomic instability while patients with IHC had the fewest amplifications and deletions. In particular, the mean number of chromosomal alterations per patient with GBC was 60.6 (range
17–110) with deletions (mean 35.0, range 9–55) more frequent than amplifications (mean 25.6, range 8–55). Patients with IHC had an average of 49.2 alterations (range 11–101) in DNA copy number with slightly more deletions (mean 26.9, range 8–80) than amplifications (mean 22.2, range 2–47). EHC specimens had an average of 43.8 chromosomal alterations (range 3–110) with an average of 22.5 deletions (range 1–61) and 21.4 amplifications (range 1–62). Moreover, there was considerable heterogeneity in the extent of chromosomal instability between patients even within specific MTMR9 cancer subtypes. For example, a number of patients within each cancer subtype had mutations in nearly every chromosomal arm while other patients with the same tumor type had minimal structural changes in their entire genome (Figure 2a). While the cumulative pattern of chromosomal alterations was highly variable, there appeared to be selected chromosomal regions that were commonly altered across all cancer subtypes. For example, a short segment of chromosome 1p was deleted in greater than 75% of patients with GBC and IHC and nearly 50% of patients with EHC. Similarly, segments of chromosomes 3p, 6q, 8p, 9p, and 14q were commonly deleted across subtypes of biliary cancers. Commonly amplified regions across cancer types include segments of 1q, 3q, 5p, 7p, 7q, 8q, and 20q (Figure 2a–e).