Project description:This was a collaborative study to discover somatic mutations in 188 lung adenocarcinomas. DNA sequencing of 623 genes with known or potential relationships to cancer revealed more than 1,000 somatic mutations across the samples. Our analysis identified 26 genes that are mutated at significantly high frequencies and thus are likely to play a role in carcinogenesis. The observed mutational profiles correlate with clinical features, smoking status, and DNA repair defects. These results are complemented by data integration including SNP array data and gene expression array data (deposited here). Our findings shed further light on several key signaling pathways involved in lung adenocarcinoma, and suggest new molecular targets for treatment. Experiment Overall Design: A subset of 75 RNAs from a corresponding set of 188 lung adenocarcinomas DNAs were resequenced across 623 genes.
Project description:Recent genome sequencing efforts have identified millions of somatic mutations in cancer. However, the functional impact of most variants is poorly understood. Here we characterize 194 somatic mutations identified in primary lung adenocarcinomas using L1000 high-throughput gene-expression assays followed by expression-based variant impact phenotyping (eVIP), a method that uses gene expression changes to distinguish impactful from netural somatic mutations. This series represents the main experiment of the study where 8 replicates of wild-type and mutant ORFs are introduced into A549 cell lines.