| Literature DB >> 26121086 |
Alexander Schramm1, Johannes Köster2, Yassen Assenov3, Kristina Althoff1, Martin Peifer4, Ellen Mahlow1, Andrea Odersky1, Daniela Beisser2, Corinna Ernst2, Anton G Henssen1, Harald Stephan1, Christopher Schröder2, Lukas Heukamp5, Anne Engesser6, Yvonne Kahlert6, Jessica Theissen6, Barbara Hero6, Frederik Roels6, Janine Altmüller7, Peter Nürnberg8, Kathy Astrahantseff9, Christian Gloeckner5, Katleen De Preter10, Christoph Plass11, Sangkyun Lee12, Holger N Lode13, Kai-Oliver Henrich14, Moritz Gartlgruber14, Frank Speleman10, Peter Schmezer3, Frank Westermann14, Sven Rahmann15, Matthias Fischer16, Angelika Eggert17, Johannes H Schulte18.
Abstract
Neuroblastoma is a malignancy of the developing sympathetic nervous system that is often lethal when relapse occurs. We here used whole-exome sequencing, mRNA expression profiling, array CGH and DNA methylation analysis to characterize 16 paired samples at diagnosis and relapse from individuals with neuroblastoma. The mutational burden significantly increased in relapsing tumors, accompanied by altered mutational signatures and reduced subclonal heterogeneity. Global allele frequencies at relapse indicated clonal mutation selection during disease progression. Promoter methylation patterns were consistent over disease course and were patient specific. Recurrent alterations at relapse included mutations in the putative CHD5 neuroblastoma tumor suppressor, chromosome 9p losses, DOCK8 mutations, inactivating mutations in PTPN14 and a relapse-specific activity pattern for the PTPN14 target YAP. Recurrent new mutations in HRAS, KRAS and genes mediating cell-cell interaction in 13 of 16 relapse tumors indicate disturbances in signaling pathways mediating mesenchymal transition. Our data shed light on genetic alteration frequency, identity and evolution in neuroblastoma.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26121086 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330