ChromothripsisDB: a curated database of chromothripsis
 
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PubMed ID   22100908 Publish Date   2011 Nov
Journal   Mutat Res Species  
Disease Type   Prostate cancer Technology  
Title   Transient hypermutability, chromothripsis and replication-based mechanisms in the generation of concurrent clustered mutations
Authors   Chen JM, Ferec C, Cooper DN
Affiliation   Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (INSERM), U613, Brest, France
Chromothripsis Definition   Close-by breakpoints: NA
Copy number states: NA
Fragments random joining: NA
Abstract   Clustered mutations may be broadly defined as the presence of two or more mutations within a spatially localized genomic region on a single chromosome. Known instances vary in terms of both the number and type of the component mutations, ranging from two closely spaced point mutations to tens or even hundreds of genomic rearrangements. Although clustered mutations can represent the observable net result of independent lesions sequentially acquired over multiple cell cycles, they can also be generated in a simultaneous or quasi-simultaneous manner within a single cell cycle. This review focuses on those mechanisms known to underlie the latter type. Both gene conversion and transient hypermutability are capable of generating closely spaced multiple mutations. However, a recently described phenomenon in human cancer cells, known as 'chromothripsis', has provided convincing evidence that tens to hundreds of genomic rearrangements can sometimes be generated simultaneously via a single catastrophic event. The distinctive genomic features observed in the derivative chromosomes, together with the highly characteristic junction sequences, point to non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) as being the likely underlying mutational mechanism. By contrast, replication-based mechanisms such as microhomology-mediated break-induced replication (MMBIR) which involves serial replication slippage or serial template switching probably account for those complex genomic rearrangements that comprise multiple duplications and/or triplications.
 
 
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