| Literature DB >> 24647444 |
Jinkuk Kim1, Yeri Lee2, Hee Jin Cho, Hee-Jin Cho2, Young-Eun Lee2, Jaeyeol An2, Gye-Hyun Cho3, Young-Hyeh Ko4, Kyeung Min Joo5, Do-Hyun Nam6.
Abstract
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most aggressive form of brain tumor, yet with no targeted therapy with substantial survival benefit. Recent studies on solid tumors showed that fusion genes often play driver roles and are promising targets for pharmaceutical intervention. To survey potential fusion genes in GBMs, we analysed RNA-Seq data from 162 GBM patients available through The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), and found that 3' exons of neurotrophic tyrosine kinase receptor type 1 (NTRK1, encoding TrkA) are fused to 5' exons of the genes that are highly expressed in neuronal tissues, neurofascin (NFASC) and brevican (BCAN). The fusions preserved both the transmembrane and kinase domains of NTRK1 in frame. NTRK1 is a mediator of the pro-survival signaling of nerve growth factor (NGF) and is a known oncogene, found commonly altered in human cancer. While GBMs largely lacked NTRK1 expression, the fusion-positive GBMs expressed fusion transcripts in high abundance, and showed elevated NTRK1-pathway activity. Lentiviral transduction of the NFASC-NTRK1 fusion gene in NIH 3T3 cells increased proliferation in vitro, colony formation in soft agar, and tumor formation in mice, suggesting the possibility that the fusion contributed to the initiation or maintenance of the fusion-positive GBMs, and therefore may be a rational drug target.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24647444 PMCID: PMC3960150 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0091940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Top-20 potential gene fusions predicted by discordant read pair analysis.
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| Reason for Exclusion |
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| intra |
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| 5209 | 89.3 | EGFR amplicon |
| read-through |
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| 0618 | 74.5 | Misannotation |
| intra |
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| 2571 | 74.0 | Off-frame |
| read-through |
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| 0747 | 72.9 | EGFR amplicon |
| read-through |
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| 0211 | 67.5 | EGFR amplicon |
| intra |
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| 2528 | 63.7 | Off-frame |
| cis |
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| 0817 | 52.8 | EGFR amplicon |
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| cis |
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| 0211 | 48.6 | EGFR amplicon |
| cis |
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| 2554 | 45.5 | EGFR amplicon |
| intra |
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| 2557 | 38.3 | EGFR amplicon |
| intra |
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| 5856 | 36.6 | No junction reads |
| read-through |
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| 1980 | 34.9 | Misannotation |
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| cis |
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| 0174 | 31.8 | Off-frame |
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| read-through |
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| 5651 | 30.4 | Misannotation |
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| read-through |
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| 2558 | 29.3 | Misannotation |
Fusion type: intra, intra-chromosomal; inter, inter-chromosomal; read-through, the involved genes are adjacent and on the same strand; cis, the involved genes are adjacent and on the opposite strands.
For the fusions that were not excluded by indicated reasons, gene 1 and gene 2 correspond to the 5′- or 3′-partner of each fusion.
Sample IDs are abbreviated.
RESPER is FusionSeq-reported scores for prioritization. The fusions that were not excluded are indicated in bold font.
Figure 1NFASC-NTRK1 fusion.
(A) Per-nucleotide read coverage (expression) of genomic regions along NFASC and NTRK1. The dotted line marks the DNA-level break-points in the two genes, as instructed by the fusion-point mapping result in panel B. (B) A schematic of pre-mRNAs of the NFASC-NTRK1 fusion gene. Top and bottom sequences in black are the reads that map onto the DNA-level fusion-point. The fusion-point is mapped with slight ambiguity due to 2-nt-long micro-homology between the two break-points in the involved genes. (C) A schematic of spliced transcripts of the fusion gene. Bottom sequences in black are the reads that map onto the chimeric exon-exon splicing junction.
Figure 2BCAN-NTRK1 fusion.
(A) Per-nucleotide read coverage of genomic regions along BCAN and NTRK1. The dotted line marks approximate positions where the fusion has occurred. (B) A schematic of spliced transcripts of the fusion gene. Bottom sequences in black are the reads that map onto the chimeric exon-exon splicing junction.
Figure 3Molecular consequences of NTRK1-fusion.
(A) NTRK1 expression in 170 TCGA GBM samples (from 162 patients) with RNA-Seq data. Samples bearing NTRK1-fusion genes are marked and labeled. (B) Relationship between NTRK1 expression and NGF/TrkA-downstream pathway activity in 526 TCGA GBM samples (from 526 patients) with microarray gene expression data. Samples with NTRK1-fusion are marked with red circles. Two other samples with outlier NTRK1 expression are marked with blue circles (TCGA-32-4209, TCGA-19-5947).
Figure 4Tumorigenic activities of NFASC-NTRK1 fusion gene.
(A) NFASC-NTRK1 and EGFR vIII mRNA expression in NIH 3T3 cells, determined by RT-PCR. (B) Proliferation of NIH 3T3 cells lentivirally infected with the indicated viruses. Error bars are 95% confidence intervals. (C) Number of colonies in a unit microscopic field, formed by NIH 3T3 cells infected with the indicated viruses. Red lines are the average within each group. (D) Morphology of individual colonies in soft agar, formed by NIH 3T3 cells infected with the indicated viruses. (E) Incidences of subcutaneous tumor formation in the mice injected with NIH 3T3 cells infected with the indicated viruses. (F) Inhibition of proliferation by three independent shRNAs targeting the NTRK1 fusion transcripts. Error bars are standard deviations of five-replicate experiments.