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1 tion, viral-human transcript fusion, and DNA copy number alteration.
2 non-randomly targeted by somatic mutation or copy number alteration.
3 genetic analysis of the tumor, including DNA copy number alterations.
4 an cancer, and results in widespread somatic copy number alterations.
5 ted as clonally related based on overlapping copy number alterations.
6 highly associated with specific mutations or copy number alterations.
7  used to detect point mutations, indels, and copy number alterations.
8 rs are characterized by widespread recurrent copy number alterations.
9  analyses of breast cancer transcriptome and copy number alterations.
10 form on oncogenic driver genes and recurrent copy number alterations.
11 cal pathways, clinicopathologic factors, and copy number alterations.
12  methylation, respectively, independently of copy number alterations.
13 d did not show a bias to regions involved in copy number alterations.
14 re, we discuss the costs and benefits of DNA copy-number alterations.
15 g., normal CD4 counts, contained significant copy-number alterations.
16 haracterize their exomes, transcriptomes and copy-number alterations.
17 ncordance of clonal somatic mutations (88%), copy number alterations (80%), mutational signatures, an
18  the frequencies of actionable mutations and copy number alterations/aberrations (CNAs) in the two mo
19 r results highlight the rarity of chromosome copy number alterations across mammalian tissues and arg
20     This can potentially generate correlated copy-number alterations across hundreds of linked genes,
21         The proliferation class has specific copy number alterations, activation of oncogenic pathway
22 ellular and multicellular subnetworks, while copy-number alterations affected downstream target genes
23  by oncogenic mutations, translocations, and copy number alterations affecting key components the NF-
24                In two independent data sets, copy-number alterations affecting either <25% or >75% of
25 ear to have multiple clones distinguished by copy number alterations alone.
26                             Whole-chromosome copy number alterations, also known as aneuploidy, are a
27 ncrease of ploidy, intratumor heterogeneity, copy-number alteration, altered expression of 37 miRNAs,
28                                              Copy number alteration analysis disclosed distinguishabl
29  of interest for further evaluation, such as copy-number alteration analysis.
30 after controlling for background effect from copy number alteration and DNA methylation.
31                                    Mutation, copy number alteration and gene expression data from The
32 s can be attributed to both a combination of copy number alteration and promoter methylation at the D
33  of somatic mutations, the burden of genomic copy number alterations and aberrations in known oncogen
34 thod to analyze the relationship between DNA copy number alterations and an archive of gene expressio
35  nonhypermutated group with multiple somatic copy number alterations and aneuploidy in approximately
36              Our study therefore links focal copy number alterations and chromothripsis with poor out
37 l surface proteins by flow cytometry and for copy number alterations and differential gene expression
38 d identified significantly mutated genes and copy number alterations and discovered putative tumor su
39 F2/SF3B1-mutant tumors have distinct somatic copy number alterations and DNA methylation profiles, pr
40  somatic sequence mutations with genome-wide copy number alterations and gene expression profiles rev
41 d ALL cases using microarray analysis of DNA copy number alterations and gene expression, and genome-
42                                   Regions of copy number alterations and germline DNA variants are so
43  two types of sequencing information-somatic copy number alterations and loss of heterozygosity-withi
44  genes are altered we tested how expression, copy number alterations and mutation status varied acros
45 ntified a large number of previously unknown copy number alterations and mutations, requiring experim
46 ng 5 G1 tumors) was characterized by limited copy number alterations and mutations.
47 nce in situ hybridization were used to study copy number alterations and MYB rearrangements.
48 atic aberrations in breast cancer, including copy number alterations and point mutations.
49 ve that HAMPs have a high frequency of focal copy number alterations and recurrent mutations, whereas
50 ns, short insertions and deletions (indels), copy number alterations and selected fusions across 287
51 nary phylogeny of a tumor using both somatic copy number alterations and single-nucleotide alteration
52 d next-generation sequencing data of somatic copy number alterations and somatic mutations in 303 met
53 atient samples for identification of somatic copy number alterations and translocations.
54 quency of whole chromosome or chromosome arm copy number alterations and were associated with an incr
55 tion of tumor gene expression, while somatic copy-number alteration and CpG methylation accounted for
56 assively parallel sequencing, which identify copy-number alterations and breakpoint junctions, but th
57  We also analyzed a large dataset of somatic copy-number alterations and gene expression levels measu
58 ypes, which are based on patterns of genomic copy-number alterations and gene expression(12,13)).
59                 Cohort samples had extensive copy-number alterations and highly recurrent somatic mut
60      PCNSLs and PTLs exhibit frequent 9p24.1 copy-number alterations and infrequent translocations of
61 ionated VE-cadherin-positive cells uncovered copy-number alterations and mutated TP53, confirming hum
62 ad intratumor heterogeneity for both somatic copy-number alterations and mutations.
63 sion, alternative splicing, point mutations, copy-number alterations and premature truncation) or red
64 re derived more commonly from mutations than copy number alterations, and compared the prevelence of
65 icant higher numbers of structural variants, copy number alterations, and driver changes than nnMCL,
66 enetic alterations (somatic point mutations, copy number alterations, and gene fusions) in ALK(-) ALC
67   These include mutations in TP53, arm-level copy number alterations, and HLA loss of heterozygosity.
68                                   Mutations, copy number alterations, and Merkel cell polyomavirus (M
69 tures consistent with aging tissues, minimal copy number alterations, and no genomic rearrangements.
70 enetic abnormalities: chimeric gene fusions, copy number alterations, and single-nucleotide variants.
71 etic alterations -somatic mutations, somatic copy number alterations, and structural variants-in a co
72 requency of single-nucleotide variations and copy number alterations, and underline the importance of
73                 After integration of somatic copy-number alterations, and clinical features specific
74 l burden (e.g., microsatellite instability), copy-number alterations, and specific somatic alteration
75                                  Chromosomal copy number alterations (aneuploidy) define the genomic
76  average mRNA-protein correlations, and gene copy number alterations are dampened at the protein-leve
77         Acquired chromosomal instability and copy number alterations are hallmarks of cancer.
78                      While chromosome 9p24.1 copy-number alterations are ubiquitous in cHL, they also
79                                              Copy-number alterations are widespread in animal and pla
80 than 75% of the genome is subject to somatic copy number alterations, are associated with a potential
81 c events, including intragenic mutations and copy number alterations, are required.
82            We also identify higher number of copy number alterations as a risk factor for recurrence,
83 lated genes in HCCs, we integrated their DNA copy-number alterations as determined by aCGH data and c
84 Set Enrichment Analysis coupled with genomic copy number alteration assessment revealed that YY1-asso
85 replication stress and an abundance of focal copy-number alterations associated with activation of th
86 e expression and array CGH data revealed DNA copy number alterations at the ATF4 locus, an important
87 acterized by a distinct immunophenotype, DNA copy number alterations at the rearrangement sites, olde
88                                              Copy-number alterations became prevalent only in invasiv
89 and, studies in microorganisms show that DNA copy-number alterations can be beneficial, increasing su
90 We compared gene expression profiles and DNA copy number alteration (CNA) data from 29 normal prostat
91 ation between relapse and the pattern of DNA copy number alteration (CNA) in 168 primary tumors, rais
92                                              Copy number alteration (CNA) is a major contributor to g
93 cer and normal cells makes the estimation of copy number alteration (CNA) possible, even at very low
94                                Specifically, copy number alteration (CNA) profiles generated by next-
95 is of analysis of both somatic mutations and copy number alterations (CNA) across a 641 cancer-associ
96                                      Somatic copy number alterations (CNA) are found in most aggressi
97  paired gene expression profiles and somatic copy number alterations (CNA) information on the same pa
98 ool (Linux commandline or web-interface) for copy-number alteration (CNA) analysis and tumor purity e
99 SERTING), an algorithm for detecting somatic copy-number alteration (CNA) using whole-genome sequenci
100                   We identified differential copy-number alterations (CNA), mutations, DNA methylatio
101  patients with a marrow relapse for selected copy number alterations (CNAs) and mutations.
102                Identification of somatic DNA copy number alterations (CNAs) and significant consensus
103                          WGS also delineated copy number alterations (CNAs) and structural variants i
104 otide polymorphism array profiling to detect copy number alterations (CNAs) and uniparental disomies
105                              Whether somatic copy number alterations (CNAs) are a frequent cause of a
106                                      Somatic copy number alterations (CNAs) are a hallmark of cancer,
107                 We discovered six cases with copy number alterations (CNAs) at the IDH1 locus at recu
108 cell malignancy driven in part by increasing copy number alterations (CNAs) during disease progressio
109             Quantitative analysis of somatic copy number alterations (CNAs) has broad applications in
110        Both gene expression levels (GEs) and copy number alterations (CNAs) have important biological
111            Here we monitored the dynamics of copy number alterations (CNAs) in 1,110 PDX samples acro
112                                              Copy number alterations (CNAs) in cancer patients show a
113 , for the detection of somatic mutations and copy number alterations (CNAs) in exome data from tumor-
114                    The accurate detection of copy number alterations (CNAs) in human genomes is impor
115 ic value of frequently detected somatic gene copy number alterations (CNAs) in mantle cell lymphoma (
116                         We hypothesized that copy number alterations (CNAs) of intergenic nonprotein-
117 ere genomically unstable, with a median of 9 copy number alterations (CNAs) per case, many of such CN
118                                              Copy number alterations (CNAs) play an important role in
119 DLBCLs, we identified a comprehensive set of copy number alterations (CNAs) that decreased p53 activi
120                                          DNA copy number alterations (CNAs) were defined by using arr
121  than 99% for genotyping DNA samples without copy number alterations (CNAs), almost all of these algo
122 ubstitutions, insertions/deletions (indels), copy number alterations (CNAs), and a wide range of gene
123 matic mutations, chromosomal rearrangements, copy number alterations (CNAs), and associated driver ge
124 2 (28%) gene mutations, recurrent arm-length copy number alterations (CNAs), and focal alterations su
125 nd investigate the relationship between SVs, copy number alterations (CNAs), and mRNA expression.
126 antity of genetic material, known as somatic copy number alterations (CNAs), can drive tumorigenesis.
127 R337H+ patients presented a higher number of copy number alterations (CNAs), compared to the R337H-.
128 e-wide single nucleotide alterations (SNAs), copy number alterations (CNAs), DNA methylation, and RNA
129 calized genes resulting from the presence of copy number alterations (CNAs), for which analysis of th
130 cer (BCa) cell lines and compared mutations, copy number alterations (CNAs), gene expression and drug
131 d in 12 patients; 3 of them showed identical copy number alterations (CNAs), in another 3 cases, MRD
132            Chaos3 tumors underwent recurrent copy number alterations (CNAs), particularly deletion of
133 th high ARID1A mutation rates typically lack copy number alterations (CNAs).
134 ina Omni 2.5 platforms were used to evaluate copy-number alterations (CNAs) and determine their assoc
135                               Aneuploidy and copy-number alterations (CNAs) are a hallmark of human c
136 ing antigen-specific CTLs in vivo results in copy-number alterations (CNAs) associated with DNA damag
137 use their tumors share some chromosome-scale copy-number alterations (CNAs) but little-to-no single-n
138 fluencing folate pathway genes (mRNA, miRNA, copy number alterations [CNAs], SNPs, single nucleotide
139 significantly higher level of aneuploidy and copy number alterations compared with the carcinogen-ind
140 t are essential in the context of particular copy-number alterations (copy-number associated gene dep
141              Neither MYB-NFIB fusion nor any copy number alteration correlated with survival.
142 , USO1, and ZNF668) in which NM/SSM-specific copy number alterations correlated with differential gen
143 oor outcome (reduced survival time); somatic copy number alterations correlated with expression of 27
144                  It is commonly assumed that copy number alteration data can be modeled as piecewise
145 btypes, we analyzed exome, transcriptome and copy number alteration data from 167 primary human tumor
146                                   Human gene copy number alteration data, microarray expression data,
147 or mutations based on mutant allele data and copy number alteration data.
148                       Furthermore, analyzing copy number alterations data from 1,547 cancer patients
149   Here, we obtained exome, transcriptome and copy-number alteration data from approximately 53 sample
150                     Therefore, we integrated copy-number alteration data from the 8 most commonly del
151 re frequently targeted by somatic mutations, copy number alterations, DE and AS, indicating their pro
152 t mutations, small insertions/deletions, and copy number alterations detected in the initial TNBC hum
153                  Remarkably, we observe that copy number alteration detection could identify the geno
154 m 29 tissues (integrating somatic mutations, copy number alterations, DNA methylation, and gene expre
155 rvival using diverse molecular data (somatic copy-number alteration, DNA methylation and mRNA, microR
156 ive elongation factor E (NELFE), via somatic copy-number alterations enhanced MYC signaling and promo
157                    We stratify mutations and copy number alterations for important kidney cancer gene
158 equires "third-hit driver" mutations/somatic copy-number alterations found in non-DS leukemias.
159                                      Somatic copy number alterations frequently occur in the cancer g
160 , we performed a genome-wide analysis of DNA copy number alterations from 34 unique surgical CRPC spe
161 utomated tool that integrates SV candidates, copy number alterations, gene expression, and genome ann
162 e the growth of pediatric cancers, including copy number alterations, gene fusions, enhancer hijackin
163                          We identify somatic copy number alterations, gene mutations and the basal ex
164 etic features, we identified several somatic copy-number alterations, gene mutations, and the basal e
165 aracterized by increased accumulation of DNA copy number alterations, greater genetic diversity and i
166 ide variations However, detection of somatic copy number alteration has been substantially less explo
167            While cancer driver mutations and copy-number alterations have been studied at a systems-l
168 ng, we comprehensively map out the facets of copy number alteration heterogeneity in a cohort of brea
169 ss-species comparative analysis of recurrent copy number alterations identifies several candidate dri
170 s reveals the convergent effects of distinct copy number alterations impacting on common downstream p
171 s mutated in various diseases and regions of copy number alteration in cancer.
172 ype p53 harboring 1q gain, the most frequent copy number alteration in cancer.
173 LOY) is the most frequently detected somatic copy number alteration in leukocytes of men.
174 ultiple genes also targeted by recurring DNA copy number alterations in ALL, suggesting that these ge
175 ptional responses to long-term selection for copy number alterations in cancer cells.
176 ivity (n = 52) as a framework to analyze DNA copy number alterations in combination with data from a
177  the fragments for each patient, identifying copy number alterations in EGFR and CDKN2A/B/p14ARF as e
178 ve identified large numbers of mutations and copy number alterations in human cancers.
179 ve in vitro and in vivo studies, we identify copy number alterations in key extracellular matrix prot
180 ncer genes to compare the gene mutations and copy number alterations in MCV-positive (n = 13) and -ne
181 de, high-resolution assessment of chromosome copy number alterations in mouse and human tissues.
182   We assessed single nucleotide variants and copy number alterations in mutDNA using Tagged-Amplicon-
183 ignaling pathway gene mutations (n = 10) and copy number alterations in MYC/MYCN (n = 6) and cell cyc
184  identified a distinctive pattern of somatic copy number alterations in Sezary syndrome, including hi
185  combined detection of single-nucleotide and copy number alterations in single cells in intact archiv
186 cing prognosis across all tumor types, while copy number alterations in the electron transport chain
187                            Prevalent somatic copy number alterations in the MICA and MICB genes relat
188 ction and quantification of the absolute DNA copy number alterations in tumor cells is challenging be
189               Multiple somatic mutations and copy-number alterations in genes that are therapeutic ta
190 ckpoint regulators, chromatin modifiers, and copy-number alterations in mediating selective response
191 y associated with an increase in genome-wide copy-number alterations in multiple human cancers.
192 TEN, TP53, STK11 and KRAS as well as several copy-number alterations in the pathogenesis of cervical
193                CTCs revealed a wide range of copy number alterations including those previously repor
194 lted in parallel evolution of driver somatic copy-number alterations, including amplifications in CDK
195  We identify spatially distinct evolution of copy number alterations influencing local immune composi
196                                      Somatic copy number alterations involving the ESR1 gene occur in
197 int mutations or structural variants such as copy-number alterations is associated with an ~10-fold i
198                                      Somatic copy number alterations leading to allelic imbalance (AI
199 tween immune metagene expression and somatic copy number alteration levels (rho = -0.484, P = 2 x 10-
200 utational load, neoantigen load, and somatic copy number alteration levels between immune-rich TNBC c
201 e highly similar at the level of global gene copy number alterations, loss of heterozygosity and sing
202 rated analysis of somatic mutations, somatic copy number alterations, low pass copy numbers, and gene
203 reast cancer heterogeneity by modeling mRNA, copy number alterations, microRNAs, and methylation in a
204  older age, genomic complexity, specific DNA copy number alterations, MK, and dismal outcome.
205 r mutation burden, frequency of mutations or copy number alterations, mutation signatures, intratumor
206                           Somatic mutations, copy-number alterations, mutation load, and mutation sig
207 tory checkpoints, genome-wide frequencies of copy number alterations, mutational signatures in whole
208 s retain the histology, gene expression, DNA copy number alterations, mutations and treatment respons
209 kely to be missed, such as genes affected by copy number alterations, mutations in noncoding regions,
210 have been described, including mutations and copy number alterations, notably ERBB2 amplifications, t
211 y is a critical issue in the analyses of DNA copy number alterations obtained from microarrays.
212                                              Copy number alterations of 9p24.1/CD274(PD-L1)/PDCD1LG2(
213 netic basis for immune evasion: near-uniform copy number alterations of chromosome 9p24.1 and the ass
214       Immune infiltration is correlated with copy number alterations of chromosome arm 6p, suggesting
215                                        Focal copy number alterations of ERG, IKZF1, PAX5, ETV6, RB1,
216 ent on the extra chromosome or are caused by copy number alterations of many genes that confer no obs
217 vating TP53 mutations, whereas 75% exhibited copy number alterations of TP53 or its upstream modifier
218 es that are due to the cumulative effects of copy-number alterations of many genes simultaneously.
219                                              Copy number alterations often occur in mitotic crises, a
220 ct primary tumors and did not harbor similar copy number alterations or demonstrate significant mutat
221  have recently been shown to commonly harbor copy number alterations or mutations in the tumor suppre
222 ed; approximately 60% of patients carried no copy number alterations other than those detected by flu
223 ted with the acquisition of disease-relevant copy number alterations over time.
224 bility was partly explained by heterogeneous copy number alteration patterns or expression of a stemn
225  genomic rearrangements, and 323 segments of copy number alteration per tumour.
226                 We identified a mean of 1.28 copy number alterations per case at diagnosis in both pa
227 ompared with t(14;18)(-) FL (mean, 0.77 vs 9 copy number alterations per case; P <001).
228 red-sample analysis (n = 144), a mean of 1.8 copy number alterations per patient were identified; app
229 elevant somatic mutations and one high-level copy-number alteration per sample (range, 0-5 and 0-6, r
230    Taken together, our comprehensive view of copy number alterations provides a framework for underst
231 onsideration of additional features, such as copy number alteration, quantitative protein expression,
232 ith oncogenes, tumor suppressors and somatic copy number alterations related to cancer development.
233 andom patterns of clustered breakpoints with copy-number alterations resulting in interspersed gene d
234 ntegrative analysis of mutations and somatic copy-number alterations revealed frequent genetic altera
235 ected pituitary adenomas showed that somatic copy number alteration (SCNA) rather than mutation is a
236 transcriptomic data is confounded by somatic copy number alterations (SCNA), which produce co-express
237                                      Somatic copy-number alterations (SCNA) are a hallmark of many ca
238 characterized by the accumulation of somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) and point mutations (PMs
239 er gene mutations and most arm-level somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) are clonal.
240               Many cancer-associated somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) are known.
241 line copy number variants (CNVs) and somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) are of significant impor
242 cale, we surveyed haplotype-specific somatic copy number alterations (sCNAs) in 1,708 normal-appearin
243  of driver loci underlying arm-level somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) in cancer has remained c
244  PBRM1 mutations, del(14q) and other somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) including amp(7), del(1p
245 oss of senescence, are of consistent somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) involving chromosomal re
246           The resulting diversity in somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) may provide the variatio
247                      Determining how somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) promote cancer is an imp
248                         Detection of somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs) using high-throughput se
249 lation marks, somatic mutations, and somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs), among others - as predi
250          Here, we investigate ITH of somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs), DNA methylation, and po
251            Aneuploidy, also known as somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs), is widespread in cancer
252      Cancer genomes exhibit profound somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs).
253  Extensive prior research focused on somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs) affecting cancer genes,
254           In a genome-wide survey on somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs) of long noncoding RNA (l
255 iR-4707-5p, PCAT1), were involved in somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs) or structural variants (
256  somatic point mutations, but rather somatic copy-number alterations (SCNAs).
257                                     Although copy number alterations showed strong cis- and trans-eff
258                                   Clustering copy number alterations shows that most cell lines resem
259            We identify somatic mutations and copy number alterations significantly associated with po
260 n), acquire somatic mutations and widespread copy number alterations similar to those observed in hum
261 ssion, exon expression, microRNA expression, copy number alteration, SNP, whole exome sequence, and D
262 .0001) and by a higher frequency of specific copy number alterations, such as -5/5q-, -7/7q-, -16/16q
263 lesions displayed numerous large chromosomal copy number alterations, suggesting they might precede s
264                                              Copy number alterations target multiple tumour suppressi
265                      These cancers possessed copy number alterations targeting key loci in human T ce
266 s characterized by fewer mutations and fewer copy number alterations than LUADs from individuals of E
267 es, with fewer mutations, rearrangements and copy-number alterations than reported in other tumors in
268 ports an innovative analytical framework for copy number alterations that are oncogenic primarily owi
269 cancer is characterized by recurrent genomic copy number alterations that are presumed to contribute
270 ssion landscape is determined by the somatic copy number alterations that drive expression in cis led
271 s are characterized by non-random chromosome copy number alterations that presumably contain oncogene
272  after tumor initiation that largely reflect copy number alterations that target cellular processes o
273 ssess the phenotypic consequences of genomic copy-number alterations that are repeatedly observed in
274 K signaling, were among the most significant copy-number alterations that co-occurred with ERG genomi
275 ides a permissive landscape for selection of copy-number alterations that drive cancer proliferation.
276 DNA cleavage toxicity biases associated with copy number alterations, the effects of sgRNAs co-target
277                              The presence of copy number alterations, the occurrence of multiple seed
278 oth exhibited recurrent whole-chromosome DNA copy number alterations, the specific chromosomes altere
279 getable mutations but is defined by frequent copy-number alteration, the most common of which is gain
280  the detection of 'actionable' mutations and copy number alterations to guide treatment decisions, ac
281            We analyzed IR-induced tumors for copy number alterations to identify oncogenic changes th
282 e was pronounced intratumor heterogeneity in copy number alterations, translocations, and mutations a
283 n driver cancer gene alterations--mutations, copy number alterations, translocations, and/or chromoso
284                                       As DNA copy-number alterations underlie many human diseases, we
285                                  In animals, copy-number alterations usually exhibit dosage effects,
286 iver predictions with information on somatic copy number alterations, we find that the distribution a
287                               In addition to copy number alterations, we observe a propensity of the
288  somatic structural variants, and 12 somatic copy number alterations were detected in the patient's l
289                               Five recurrent copy number alterations were identified in PAs, includin
290           Co-occurring genomic mutations and copy number alterations were identified.
291 tion status, PTEN loss, EGFR expression, and copy number alterations were not associated with clinica
292                           Significantly more copy number alterations were observed in the group with
293                          AR mutations and/or copy number alterations were robustly detected in 48% (3
294                                      Somatic copy-number alterations were the major drivers of variat
295 the GEMM genomic landscapes are dominated by copy number alterations, while protein-altering mutation
296  this is a heterogeneous cancer dominated by copy number alterations with frequent large-scale rearra
297     The arrayCGH analysis revealed recurrent copy number alterations with losses involving 6q23-q27,
298 on associated with structure rearrangements, copy number alterations, with preferential amplification
299                               These CYCLOPS (copy number alterations yielding cancer liabilities owin
300 er associated gene dependencies was CYCLOPS (Copy-number alterations Yielding Cancer Liabilities Owin

 
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