A landscape of pharmacogenomic interactions in cancer

Author

Iorio, Francesco

Knijnenburg, Theo A.

Vis, Daniel J.

Bignell, Graham

Menden, Michael P.

Schubert, Michael

Aben, Nanne

Gonçalves, Emanuel

Barthorpe, Syd

Lightfoot, Howard

Cokelae, Thomas

Greninger, Patricia

Dyk, Ewald van

Chang, Han

Silva, Heshani de

Heyn, Holger

Deng, Xianming

Egan, Regina K.

Liu, Qingsong

Mironenko, Tatiana

Mitropoulos, Xeni

Richardson, Laura

Wang, Jinhua

Zhang, Tinghu

Moran, Sebastian

Sayols, Sergi

Soleimani, Maryam

Tamborero Noguera, David

López Bigas, Núria

Ross-Macdonald, Petra

Esteller, Manel

Gray, Nathanael S.

Haber, Daniel A.

Stratton, Michael R.

Benes, Cyril H.

Wessels, Lodewyk F. A.

Saez-Rodriguez, Julia

McDermott, Ultan

Garnett, Mathew J.

Publication date

2017-07-28T10:37:00Z

2017-07-28T10:37:00Z

2016-07-28

2017-07-28T10:37:00Z

Abstract

Systematic studies of cancer genomes have provided unprecedented insights into the molecular nature of cancer. Using this information to guide the development and application of therapies in the clinic is challenging. Here, we report how cancer-driven alterations identified in 11,289 tumors from 29 tissues (integrating somatic mutations, copy number alterations, DNA methylation, and gene expression) can be mapped onto 1,001 molecularly annotated human cancer cell lines and correlated with sensitivity to 265 drugs. We find that cell lines faithfully recapitulate oncogenic alterations identified in tumors, find that many of these associate with drug sensitivity/resistance, and highlight the importance of tissue lineage in mediating drug response. Logic-based modeling uncovers combinations of alterations that sensitize to drugs, while machine learning demonstrates the relative importance of different data types in predicting drug response. Our analysis and datasets are rich resources to link genotypes with cellular phenotypes and to identify therapeutic options for selected cancer sub-populations.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Càncer; Oncogènesi; Medicaments antineoplàstics; Resistència als medicaments; Farmacogenètica; Genomes; Fenotip; Cancer; Carcinogenesis; Antineoplastic agents; Drug resistance; Pharmacogenetics; Genomes; Phenotype

Publisher

Cell Press

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.06.017

Cell, 2016, vol. 166, num. 3, p. 740-754

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.06.017

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/268626/EU//EPINORC

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/600388/EU//TECNIOSPRING

Rights

cc-by (c) Iorio, Francesco et al., 2016

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es