The oncogenome of the domestic cat.

Cancer is a common cause of morbidity and mortality in domestic cats. Because the mutational landscape of domestic cat tumors remains uncharacterized, we performed targeted sequencing of 493 feline tumor-normal tissue pairs from 13 tumor types, focusing on the feline orthologs of ~1000 human cancer genes. TP53 was the most frequently mutated gene, and the most recurrent copy number alterations were loss of PTEN or FAS or gain of MYC. By identifying 31 driver genes, mutational signatures, viral sequences, and tumor-predisposing germline variants, our study provides insight into the domestic cat oncogenome. We demonstrate key similarities with the human oncogenome, confirming the cat as a valuable model for comparative studies, and identify potentially actionable mutations, aligning with a "One Medicine" approach.
Cancer
Care/Management

Authors

Francis Francis, Ludwig Ludwig, He He, Dobromylskyj Dobromylskyj, Bertram Bertram, Aupperle-Lellbach Aupperle-Lellbach, Wong Wong, Foster Foster, Arends Arends, Suárez-Bonnet Suárez-Bonnet, Priestnall Priestnall, Tatiersky Tatiersky, Castillo-Alcala Castillo-Alcala, Rupp Rupp, Khachadoorian Khachadoorian, Parlak Parlak, Inglebert Inglebert, Umamaheswaran Umamaheswaran, Cheema Cheema, Del Castillo Velasco-Herrera Del Castillo Velasco-Herrera, Wong Wong, Vermes Vermes, Billington Billington, Rottenberg Rottenberg, Wood Wood, Adams Adams, van der Weyden van der Weyden
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