Investigation of genetic mutations in high-risk and low-risk basal cell carcinoma in a non-caucasian population by whole exome sequencing

  • Hyun Jee Kim
  • , Minho Lee
  • , Young Bok Lee
  • , Dong Soo Yu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study analysed genomic mutations in basal cell carcinoma using whole exome sequencing of DNA spe-cimens obtained from 20 Korean patients. Histological evaluation determined that 15 (75%) were low-risk basal cell carcinomas, and 5 (25%) were high-risk basal cell carcinomas. Seventy-five percent of the basal cell carcinomas harboured somatic mutations in hedge hog pathway genes (PTCH1, 40% and SMO, 50%) and 45% harboured mutations in TP53. LRP1B was the most frequently mutated gene in high-risk basal cell carcinomas, SMO was the most frequently mutated gene in low-risk basal cell car-cinomas. Specifically, LRP1B, ROS1, PTCH1, KMT2C, NSD1 and ARID1A mutations were more frequent in high-risk basal cell carcinomas than in low-risk basal cell carcinomas. However, copy number gains of the ROS1 gene were observed only in low-risk basal cell carcinomas. Other basal cell carcinoma related genes found in this study include: KDR, KMT2D, FAT1, FAT4, GRIN2A, ERBB4, NOTCH2, PDE4DIP, TET1, ZFHX3 and PREX2. These results provide insight into basal cell carcinoma in non-Caucasians.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberadv00458
JournalActa Dermato-Venereologica
Volume101
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Basal cell carcinoma
  • Genetics
  • Histopathology
  • Mutation
  • Skin cancer
  • Whole exome sequencing

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