Thursday, December 15, 2022

Recurrent repeat expansions in human cancer genomes

Erwin, G.S., Gürsoy, G., Al-Abri, R. et al.; Nature (2022). doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05515-1 

Expansions of tandem DNA repeats (TRs) are known to cause more than 50 devastating human diseases, including Huntington’s disease and fragile X syndrome1,2. TR tracts that cause human disease are typically large (more than 100 bp)1. However, identifying large TRs with short-read DNA sequencing methods is difficult because the repeat sequences are ubiquitous in the genome and many are too large—larger than the typical sequencing read length—to uniquely map to the reference genome9. Thus, many large TRs go undetected with current genomic technologies, and, despite their importance to monogenic disease, the frequency and function of recurrent repeat expansions (rREs) are unknown in complex human genetic diseases such as cancer.