| Literature DB >> 20714900 |
Markus J Riemenschneider1, Judith W M Jeuken, Pieter Wesseling, Guido Reifenberger.
Abstract
Modern neuropathology serves a key function in the multidisciplinary management of brain tumor patients. Owing to the recent advancements in molecular neurooncology, the neuropathological assessment of brain tumors is no longer restricted to provide information on a tumor's histological type and malignancy grade, but may be complemented by a growing number of molecular tests for clinically relevant tissue-based biomarkers. This article provides an overview and critical appraisal of the types of genetic and epigenetic aberrations that have gained significance in the molecular diagnostics of gliomas, namely deletions of chromosome arms 1p and 19q, promoter hypermethylation of the O6-methylguanine-methyl-transferase (MGMT) gene, and the mutation status of the IDH1 and IDH2 genes. In addition, the frequent oncogenic aberration of BRAF in pilocytic astrocytomas may serve as a novel diagnostic marker and therapeutic target. Finally, this review will summarize recent mechanistic insights into the molecular alterations underlying treatment resistance in malignant gliomas and outline the potential of genome-wide profiling approaches for increasing our repertoire of clinically useful glioma markers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20714900 PMCID: PMC2955236 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-010-0736-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1Summary of most frequent molecular alterations in astrocytic, oligodendroglial, and oligoastrocytic gliomas. Primary glioblastomas, the most common gliomas in adults, show complex chromosomal, genetic, and epigenetic alterations targeting genes involved in important cellular pathways, namely the receptor tyrosin kinase/mitogen-activated protein kinase/phosphoinositol 3-kinase pathway (e.g. EGFR, MET, PDGFRA, ERBB2, NF1, PTEN, PIK3R1, PI3KCA, CTMP), the p53 pathway (e.g. TP53, p14 , MDM2, MDM4), and the pRb1 pathway (e.g. CDKN2A, CDKN2B, CDK4, CDK6, RB1). In addition, primary glioblastomas frequently show monosomy 10, trisomy 7 and gains of 19q and 20q. Diffuse WHO grade II and III astrocytic, oligodendroglial and oligoastrocytic gliomas and secondary glioblastomas frequently carry mutations in IDH1 or IDH2, suggesting that they share a common, yet to be defined cell of origin. Diffuse astrocytic gliomas often carry additional TP53 mutations, while oligodendroglial tumors are characterized by 1p/19q deletion. Most oligoastrocytomas have either of these alterations. Molecular changes associated with progression to anaplastic glioma include 9p losses and inactivation of the CDKN2A, p14 and CDKN2B genes on 9p21 as well as other changes, while progression to secondary glioblastoma is associated with frequent loss of 10q and DCC loss of expression among others. The majority of pilocytic astrocytomas are characterized by duplication/fusion or point mutation of the BRAF gene on 7q34, while other genomic aberrations are rare
The four markers that are presently the most relevant for molecular diagnostics of gliomas
| Molecular marker | Clinical significance |
|---|---|
|
| Predictive for response of glioblastomas to alkylating chemotherapy |
| Associated with longer survival of glioblastoma patients treated with radiotherapy combined with concurrent and adjuvant temozolomide | |
| Prognostic in anaplastic glioma patients treated with radio- and/or alkylating chemotherapy | |
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| Associated with better prognosis in (oligodendro)glial tumor patients receiving adjuvant radio- and/or chemotherapy |
| Not predictive for response to a particular type of therapy | |
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| Diagnostic marker for diffuse WHO grade II and III gliomas as well as secondary glioblastomas and associated with a better prognosis in these tumors |
| Rare in primary glioblastomas but when present associated with more favorable outcome | |
| Not predictive for response to a particular type of therapy | |
|
| Diagnostic marker for pilocytic astrocytomas, helpful to distinguish these from diffuse astrocytomas |
| Prognostic significance within the group of pilocytic astrocytoma patients unknown |
Fig. 2Different types of 1p and 19q losses as detected by array-CGH. Genomic profiles were obtained using tiling-resolution arrays containing 32,447 human BAC clones. Profiles are shown for chromosomes 1 and 19. On the X axis, BACs are aligned according to their physical mapping positions from the 1p telomere to the 1q telomere (n = 2,365) and from the 19p telomere to the 19q telomere (n = 735). On the the Y axis, the log2-transformed and normalized test:reference intensity ratios [“2Log(T/R)”]) are represented. Centromeric and heterochromatic regions are not evaluated using array-CGH resulting in absence of ratios (i.e. spots) in these regions and thereby visually separating the p-arm from the q-arm. Losses detected are indicated by a bar shown on the bottom of the ratio profiles, representing a complete chromosomes 1p and 19q loss (a), a loss of 1p11-p31.1, and 19q13.31-19qter (b), and a loss of 1pter-1p31.2 and 19q13.32-19qter (c)
Fig. 3Distribution of the four clinically relevant molecular alterations according to glioma entity. Colored squares indicate that the particular aberration is frequent in the respective tumor entity, i.e., usually detectable in 40% or more of the cases. Uncolored squares indicate that the aberration is rare in the respective tumor entity, i.e., usually restricted to <10% of the cases (except for MGMT promoter methylation being reported in approximately 20% of the pilocytic astrocytomas). Note that oligodendrogliomas and anaplastic oligodendrogliomas are characterized by the frequent coincidence of 1p/19q deletions, IDH1 or IDH2 mutation and MGMT promoter methylation (red squares). The same applies for oligoastrocytic tumors, although the frequency of 1p/19q deletion is less common when compared with “pure” oligodendrogliomas, also depending on the stringency of the histological classification used for mixed gliomas. IDH1 mutation and MGMT promoter methylation is frequent in diffuse astrocytomas, anaplastic astrocytomas and secondary glioblastomas (green squares). In contrast, primary glioblastomas rarely carry 1p/19q deletions and IDH1 mutations, while MGMT promoter methylation is found in approximately 40% of the cases (blue square). Pilocytic astrocytomas are uniquely characterized by BRAF alterations in more than 60% of the cases (orange square)
Overview of the most commonly used methods for the assessment of molecular markers in gliomas
| Method | Required material | Read out | Advantages/disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Methylation-specific PCR analysis | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Gel-based (qualitative) or quantitative as qPCR | Sensitive/difficult to standardize |
| Combined bisulfite restriction analysis (COBRA) | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Gel-based, percentage of cut versus uncut sequence | High specificity/test depends on single restriction sites |
| Methylation-specific sequencing | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Methylation status at the CpG sites within the amplified sequence | Most comprehensive/difficult to quantify and work intensive |
| Methylation-specific pyrosequencing | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Methylation status at single CpG sites | Quantitative and rapid/only few CpG sites analyzed, needs special equipment |
| Methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe ampli-fication (MS-MLPA) | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Ratio methylated versus unmethylated alleles, multiple CpG sites are evaluated simultaneously | Independent of sodium bisulfite conversion, provides semiquantitative data |
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| (Flourescence) in situ hybridization ((F)ISH) | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Signal ratio target versus control clone in individual cells | Best method on archival specimens/difficult to quantify, labor-intensive |
| Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) analysis | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue plus additional patient blood sample | Gel-based detection of allelic imbalance, comparative evaluation of the same set of loci in tumor and blood DNA | Better to test for multiple loci along a chromosomal arm to differentiate partial from complete losses/requires blood sample/allelic imbalance may not only be caused by allelic loss but also by allelic gain |
| Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Ratio target versus reference probe | Multiple loci (up to 45) can be assessed in a single experiment |
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| Single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Gel-based detection of aberrant bands (“shifts”) | Rapid/limited sensitivity and laborious, needs to be followed by sequencing |
| Direct sequencing | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Complete sequence of the amplified DNA fragment | Comprehensive/not quantitative, limited sensitivity in cases with low tumor cell content |
| DNA pyrosequencing | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Sequences information on fewer nucleotides | Quantitative, rapid, sensitive/needs special equipment |
| Immunohistochemistry with IDH1(R132H)- specific antibody | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Histology-based, presence or absence of staining | Easy to perform in a rotine setting, very sensitive (single cell level)/ misses other |
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| (Flourescence) in situ hybridization ((F)ISH) | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Detection of a fusion signal of 2 fluorescently labeled probes | Cell-based method/difficult to quantify and standardize |
| RT-PCR assay | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Gel-based dectection of the fusion gene | Easy to standardize and quantify/needs RNA |
| (Pyro)sequencing | Fresh frozen or FFPE tumor tissue | Detection of | Identifies only the rare cases with activating point mutations |
FFPE formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue samples