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Studies of genomic copy number changes in human cancers reveal signatures of DNA replication stress

Published inMolecular oncology, vol. 5, no. 4, p. 308-314
Publication date2011-05-20
First online date2011-05-20
Abstract

Human cancers are characterized by the presence of genomic instability. Recently, two studies have catalogued the presence of a specific class of genomic aberrations, large deletions and insertions, in a few thousand human cancers and reported that most of the prevalent recurrent focal deletions targeted common fragile sites and large genes. In various experimental systems, deletions in common fragile sites and large genes have been linked to the presence of DNA replication stress. Thus, taken together, these results suggest the presence of DNA replication stress in human cancers, consistent with the recently proposed oncogene‐induced DNA damage model for cancer development.

Keywords
  • Genomic deletions
  • Copy number changes
  • DNA replication stress
  • Common fragile sites
  • Large genes
Funding
  • European FP7 Project GENICA -
  • Swiss National Science Foundation -
Citation (ISO format)
DERELI‐ÖZ, Aygül, VERSINI, Gwennaelle, HALAZONETIS, Thanos. Studies of genomic copy number changes in human cancers reveal signatures of DNA replication stress. In: Molecular oncology, 2011, vol. 5, n° 4, p. 308–314. doi: 10.1016/j.molonc.2011.05.002
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Article (Published version)
accessLevelPublic
Identifiers
Journal ISSN1574-7891
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