abstract
An extremely high cancer incidence and the hypersensitivity to DNA
crosslinking agents associated with Fanconi Anemia (FA) have marked it
to be a unique genetic model system to study human cancer etiology and
treatment, which has emerged an intense area of investigation in cancer
research. However, there is limited information about the relationship
between the mutated FA pathway and the cancer development or/and
treatment in patients without FA. Here we analyzed the mutation rates of
the seventeen FA genes in 68 DNA sequence datasets. We found that the
FA pathway is frequently mutated across a variety of human cancers, with
a rate mostly in the range of 15 to 35 % in human lung, brain, bladder,
ovarian, breast cancers, or others. Furthermore, we found a
statistically significant correlation (p < 0.05) between the mutated
FA pathway and the development of human bladder cancer that we only
further analyzed. Together, our study demonstrates a previously unknown
fact that the mutated FA pathway frequently occurs during the
development of non-FA human cancers, holding profound implications
directly in advancing our understanding of human tumorigenesis as well
as tumor sensitivity/resistance to crosslinking drug-relevant
chemotherapy.
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