| Literature DB >> 25512523 |
Jennifer A Perry1, Adam Kiezun2, Peter Tonzi1, Eliezer M Van Allen3, Scott L Carter2, Sylvan C Baca3, Glenn S Cowley2, Ami S Bhatt3, Esther Rheinbay2, Chandra Sekhar Pedamallu3, Elena Helman3, Amaro Taylor-Weiner2, Aaron McKenna2, David S DeLuca2, Michael S Lawrence2, Lauren Ambrogio2, Carrie Sougnez2, Andrey Sivachenko2, Loren D Walensky4, Nikhil Wagle5, Jaume Mora6, Carmen de Torres6, Cinzia Lavarino6, Simone Dos Santos Aguiar7, Jose Andres Yunes8, Silvia Regina Brandalise9, Gabriela Elisa Mercado-Celis10, Jorge Melendez-Zajgla10, Rocío Cárdenas-Cardós11, Liliana Velasco-Hidalgo11, Charles W M Roberts4, Levi A Garraway5, Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo4, Stacey B Gabriel2, Eric S Lander12, Todd R Golub13, Stuart H Orkin14, Gad Getz15, Katherine A Janeway16.
Abstract
Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone tumor, yet there have been no substantial advances in treatment or survival in three decades. We examined 59 tumor/normal pairs by whole-exome, whole-genome, and RNA-sequencing. Only the TP53 gene was mutated at significant frequency across all samples. The mean nonsilent somatic mutation rate was 1.2 mutations per megabase, and there was a median of 230 somatic rearrangements per tumor. Complex chains of rearrangements and localized hypermutation were detected in almost all cases. Given the intertumor heterogeneity, the extent of genomic instability, and the difficulty in acquiring a large sample size in a rare tumor, we used several methods to identify genomic events contributing to osteosarcoma survival. Pathway analysis, a heuristic analytic algorithm, a comparative oncology approach, and an shRNA screen converged on the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/mTOR) pathway as a central vulnerability for therapeutic exploitation in osteosarcoma. Osteosarcoma cell lines are responsive to pharmacologic and genetic inhibition of the PI3K/mTOR pathway both in vitro and in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: PI3K; TP53; genomics; mTOR; osteosarcoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25512523 PMCID: PMC4280630 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1419260111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205