Investigator

Richard Badge

Associate Professor in Bioinformatics · University of Leicester, Genetics and Genome Biology

RBRichard Badge
Papers(1)
Dynamic and Ongoing …
Collaborators(10)
Sakari HietanenSampsa HautaniemiSanna PikkusaariSrividhya SundaresanTaru A. MuranenThomas R. PisanicYilin LiAnna VähärautioBarun PradhanFatih Genç
Institutions(4)
University Of Leicest…Turku University Hosp…University of HelsinkiJohns Hopkins Medicine

Papers

Dynamic and Ongoing De Novo L1 Retrotransposition Contributes to Genome Plasticity and Intrapatient Heterogeneity in Ovarian Cancer

Abstract Long interspersed element-1 (L1) retrotransposons are the only protein-coding active transposable elements in the human genome. Although typically silenced in normal cells, they are highly expressed in many human epithelial cancers, including high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC), and can integrate into the genome through retrotransposition. De novo L1 insertions are known to contribute to genomic instability and cancer evolution in epithelial malignancies, including HGSC, suggesting that they might also play a role in intrapatient tumor heterogeneity. In this study, we quantified de novo L1 insertions in clinical HGSC specimens and uncovered high heterogeneity in total L1 insertion events (L1 burden) between patients. HGSC tumors with high L1 burden were highly proliferative, whereas tumors with low or no L1 insertions showed enrichment of immune response and cell death pathways. Although the overall L1 burden was similar across different tumor sites within the same patient, the specific L1 insertions (L1 profiles) diverged significantly more than their single-nucleotide variants profiles. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that L1 activity and retrotransposition are highly dynamic in vivo and can contribute substantially to tumor genome plasticity, especially at late stages of cancer progression. The patient-specific propensity of acquiring L1 insertions (L1 burden) could be driven by molecular properties of the progenitor tumor. Retrotransposition-associated DNA damage and/or replication stress could be a potential molecular vulnerability for precision cancer medicine approaches. Significance: L1 retrotransposition is a dynamic process that continues at late stages of high-grade serous ovarian cancer and can substantially contribute to intrapatient tumor heterogeneity.

27Works
1Papers
23Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCystadenocarcinoma, Serous

Positions

2002–

Associate Professor in Bioinformatics

University of Leicester · Genetics and Genome Biology

2001–

Wellcome Trust International Prize Travelling Research Fellow

University of Leicester · Genetics

1999–

Wellcome Trust International Prize Travelling Research Fellow

University of Michigan · Human Genetics

1996–

PDRA

University of Nottingham · Genetics