| Literature DB >> 25255306 |
Colin C Pritchard1, Colm Morrissey2, Akash Kumar3, Xiaotun Zhang2, Christina Smith1, Ilsa Coleman4, Stephen J Salipante5, Jennifer Milbank3, Ming Yu6, William M Grady6, Jonathan F Tait1, Eva Corey2, Robert L Vessella2, Tom Walsh7, Jay Shendure3, Peter S Nelson4.
Abstract
A hypermutated subtype of advanced prostate cancer was recently described, but prevalence and mechanisms have not been well-characterized. Here we find that 12% (7 of 60) of advanced prostate cancers are hypermutated, and that all hypermutated cancers have mismatch repair gene mutations and microsatellite instability (MSI). Mutations are frequently complex MSH2 or MSH6 structural rearrangements rather than MLH1 epigenetic silencing. Our findings identify parallels and differences in the mechanisms of hypermutation in prostate cancer compared with other MSI-associated cancers.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25255306 PMCID: PMC4176888 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5988
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
MMR gene mutations in prostate cancer PDX.
| LuCaP 58 | Yes | Yes | (1) | |
| (2) | ||||
| LuCaP 73 | Yes | Yes | (1) | |
| (2) | ||||
| LuCaP 147, 147CR | 05–165 | Yes | Yes | (1) |
| (2) | ||||
| (3) | ||||
| LuCaP 23.1, 23.1CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 35, 35CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 70, 70CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 77, 77CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 78 | 98–328 | No | No | None |
| LuCaP 81 | 98–362 | No | No | Chr2 copy losses |
| LuCaP 86.2, 86.2CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 92 | 99–069 | No | No | None |
| LuCaP 96, 96CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 105, 105CR | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 141 | No | No | None | |
| LuCaP 145.1, 145.2 | 05–144 | No | No | (1) |
| (2) |
MMR, mismatch repair; MSI, microsatellite instability; PDX, patient-derived xenografts.
*Matched pairs of androgen-sensitive and castration-resistant sublines (for example, LuCaP 35 and LuCaP 35CR) and tumour lines derived from the same patient are listed numerically and grouped in the same row.
†Hypermutation status was previously determined in these samples in Kumar et al.1
‡Mosaic MSH6 frameshift mutations observed in a poly G tract in exon 5 (c.3261dup/del) and poly A tract in exon 7 (c.3573del) were detected in several hypermutated samples and are not included in the table because they are presumed to be due to MSI.
MMR gene mutations in rapid autopsy patients.
| 05–165 | Bone, adrenal, liver and lymph node | 855 | Yes | Yes | (1) |
| (2) | |||||
| (3) | |||||
| 03–130 | Lymph node | 647 | Yes | Yes | (1) |
| (2) | |||||
| (3) | |||||
| (4) | |||||
| 06–134 | Kidney and lymph node | 314 | Yes | Yes | |
| 00–010 | Prostate and liver | 673 | Yes | Yes | |
| 05–123 | Prostate and lymph node | 807 | Yes | Yes | (1) |
| (2) | |||||
| (3) | |||||
| 01–095 | Liver and lymph node | 149 | No | No | None |
| 05–144 | Bone, adrenal, liver and lymph node | 57 | No | No | (1) |
| (2) | |||||
| 05–214 | Bone, liver and lymph node (two sites) | 46 | No | No | None |
| 05–116 | Bone, adrenal, liver and lung | 47 | No | No | None |
| 00–029 | Liver | 37 | No | No | None |
| 00–090 | Lymph node | 69 | No | No | None |
MMR, mismatch repair; MSI, microsatellite instability.
*Fifty total unique autopsy patients were assessed by exome sequencing (see Supplementary Table 1). Listed are a subset of cases that were followed up by targeted deep sequencing for MMR genes. Clinical data for this patient subset is provided in Supplementary Table 6. Patient-matched non-cancer tissue was tested in every case and did not exhibit MSI or MMR mutations. LuCaP 147 and 147CR are derived from autopsy patient 05–165. LuCaP 145.1 and 145.2 are derived from autopsy patient 05–144.
†Number of protein altering somatic mutations by exome sequencing with removing of germline variants from matched-non-tumour samples.
‡Mutations were detected at every tumour site unless otherwise indicated. Mosaic MSH6 frameshift mutations observed in a poly G tract in exon 5 (c.3261dup/del) and poly A tract in exon 7 (c.3573del) were detected in several hypermutated samples and are not included in the table because they are presumed to be due to MSI.
Figure 1MSH2 and MSH6 rearrangements are associated with loss of protein expression and MSI.
(a) Four of seven hypermutated cases had complex rearrangements in MSH2 and MSH6 or both genes. Shown is a representative complex MSH2 rearrangement present in hypermutated cases LuCaP 147 and 05–165 (LuCaP 147 was derived from autopsy patient 05–165). Breakpoints were confirmed by Sanger sequencing. Genomic coordinates are hg19. Detail on additional structural rearrangements and other mismatch repair gene mutations is provided in Tables 1 and 2 and Supplementary Figs 2–9. (b) Hypermutated tumors exhibited microsatellite instability by PCR. Shown is representative data for LuCaP 58, which is positive for MSI in 3/5 mononucleotide marker systems (MONO-27, BAT-25 and NR-24, arrows). All hypermutated tumors tested were MSI-PCR positive in at least 2/5 loci (Supplementary Data 1). (c) Hypermutated tumors LuCaP 58, 73 and 147 have loss of MSH2 and MSH6 proteins by IHC. Similar results were observed in hypermutated tumors from rapid autopsy patients (Supplementary Fig. 11). A representative non-hypermutated tumour (LuCaP 23.1) has intact expression. LuCaP 145 had mono-allelic mutations in MSH2 and MSH6 but was not hypermutated. IHC shows loss of MSH6 protein expression in some tumour cells. Scale bars, 0.1 mm.