Person: Mouw, Kent
Email Address
AA Acceptance Date
Birth Date
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Job Title
Last Name
First Name
Name
Search Results
Publication DNA Repair Pathway Alterations in Bladder Cancer
(MDPI, 2017) Mouw, KentMost bladder tumors have complex genomes characterized by a high mutation burden as well as frequent copy number alterations and chromosomal rearrangements. Alterations in DNA repair pathways—including the double-strand break (DSB) and nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathways—are present in bladder tumors and may contribute to genomic instability and drive the tumor phenotype. DNA damaging such as cisplatin, mitomycin C, and radiation are commonly used in the treatment of muscle-invasive or metastatic bladder cancer, and several recent studies have linked specific DNA repair pathway defects with sensitivity to DNA damaging-based therapy. In addition, tumor DNA repair defects have important implications for use of immunotherapy and other targeted agents in bladder cancer. Therefore, efforts to further understand the landscape of DNA repair alterations in bladder cancer will be critical in advancing treatment for bladder cancer. This review summarizes the current understanding of the role of DNA repair pathway alterations in bladder tumor biology and response to therapy.
Publication Somatic ERCC2 Mutations Are Associated with a Distinct Genomic Signature in Urothelial Tumors
(2016) Kim, Jaegil; Mouw, Kent; Polak, Paz; Braunstein, Lior Z; Kamburov, Atanas; Kwiatkowski, David; Rosenberg, Jonathan E; Van Allen, Eliezer; D'Andrea, Alan; Getz, GadAlterations in DNA repair pathways are common in tumors and can result in characteristic mutational signatures; however, a specific mutational signature associated with somatic alterations in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway has not yet been identified. Here, we examine the mutational processes operating in urothelial cancer, a tumor type in which the core NER gene ERCC2 is significantly mutated. Analysis of three independent urothelial tumor cohorts reveals a strong association between somatic ERCC2 mutations and activity of a mutational signature characterized by a broad spectrum of base changes. In addition, we note an association between activity of this signature and smoking that is independent of ERCC2 mutation status, providing genomic evidence of tobacco-related mutagenesis in urothelial cancer. Together, these analyses identify the first NER-related mutational signature and highlight the related roles of DNA damage and subsequent DNA repair in shaping the tumor mutational landscape.
Publication Nucleotide excision repair (NER) alterations as evolving biomarkers and therapeutic targets in epithelial cancers
(Impact Journals LLC, 2015) Mouw, Kent; D’Andrea, Alan D.; Konstantinopoulos, PanagiotisPublication Analysis of Somatic Microsatellite Indels Identifies Driver Events in Human Tumors
(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017-09-11) Maruvka, Yosef; Mouw, Kent; Karlic, Rosa; Parasuraman, Prasanna; Kamburov, Atanas; Polak, Paz; Haradhvala, Nicholas; Hess, Julian; Rheinbay, Esther; Brody, Yehuda; Koren, Amnon; Braunstein, Lior; D'Andrea, Alan; Lawrence, Michael; Bass, Adam; Bernards, Andre; Michor, Franziska; Getz, GadMicrosatellites (MSs) are tracts of variable-length repeats of short DNA motifs that exhibit high rates of mutation in the form of insertions or deletions (indels) of the repeated motif. Despite their prevalence, the contribution of somatic MS indels to cancer has been largely unexplored, owing to difficulties in detecting them in short-read sequencing data. Here we present two tools: MSMuTect, for accurate detection of somatic MS indels, and MSMutSig, for identification of genes containing MS indels at a higher frequency than expected by chance. Applying MSMuTect to whole-exome data from 6,747 human tumors representing 20 tumor types, we identified >1,000 previously undescribed MS indels in cancer genes. Additionally, we demonstrate that the number and pattern of MS indels can accurately distinguish microsatellite-stable tumors from tumors with microsatellite instability, thus potentially improving classification of clinically relevant subgroups. Finally, we identified seven MS indel driver hotspots: four in known cancer genes (ACVR2A, RNF43, JAK1, and MSH3) and three in genes not previously implicated as cancer drivers (ESRP1, PRDM2, and DOCK3).