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      Genome-wide chemical mutagenesis screens allow unbiased saturation of the cancer genome and identification of drug resistance mutations.

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          Abstract

          Drug resistance is an almost inevitable consequence of cancer therapy and ultimately proves fatal for the majority of patients. In many cases this is the consequence of specific gene mutations that have the potential to be targeted and re-sensitize the tumor. The means therefore to saturate the genome with point mutations and that avoids chromosome or nucleotide sequence context bias would open the door to identify all possible drug resistance mutations in cancer models. Here we describe such a method for elucidating drug resistance mechanisms using genome-wide chemical mutagenesis allied to next-generation sequencing. We show that chemically mutagenizing the genome of cancer cells dramatically increases the number of drug-resistant clones and allows the detection of both known and novel drug resistance mutations. We have developed an efficient computational process that allows for the rapid identification of involved pathways and druggable targets. Such a priori knowledge would greatly empower serial monitoring strategies for drug resistance in the clinic as well as the development of trials for drug resistant patients.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          July 28 2016
          Article
          10.1101/066555
          36854007-39f5-49a6-9b55-2801f4de6068
          © 2016
          History

          Genetics
          Genetics

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