| Literature DB >> 26378811 |
Adam M Fontebasso1, Margret Shirinian2, Dong-Anh Khuong-Quang3, Denise Bechet3, Tenzin Gayden3, Marcel Kool3, Nicolas De Jay3, Karine Jacob3, Noha Gerges3, Barbara Hutter4, Huriye Şeker-Cin5, Hendrik Witt5,6, Alexandre Montpetit7, Sébastien Brunet7, Pierre Lepage7, Geneviève Bourret7, Almos Klekner8, László Bognár8, Peter Hauser9, Miklós Garami9, Jean-Pierre Farmer10, Jose-Luis Montes10, Jeffrey Atkinson10, Sally Lambert11, Tony Kwan7, Andrey Korshunov12, Uri Tabori13, V Peter Collins11, Steffen Albrecht14, Damien Faury3, Stefan M Pfister5,6, Werner Paulus15, Martin Hasselblatt15, David T W Jones5, Nada Jabado1,3.
Abstract
Pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) is the most common brain tumor in children but is rare in adults, and hence poorly studied in this age group. We investigated 222 PA and report increased aneuploidy in older patients. Aneuploid genomes were identified in 45% of adult compared with 17% of pediatric PA. Gains were non-random, favoring chromosomes 5, 7, 6 and 11 in order of frequency, and preferentially affecting non-cerebellar PA and tumors with BRAF V600E mutations and not with KIAA1549-BRAF fusions or FGFR1 mutations. Aneuploid PA differentially expressed genes involved in CNS development, the unfolded protein response, and regulators of genomic stability and the cell cycle (MDM2, PLK2),whose correlated programs were overexpressed specifically in aneuploid PA compared to other glial tumors. Thus, convergence of pathways affecting the cell cycle and genomic stability may favor aneuploidy in PA, possibly representing an additional molecular driver in older patients with this brain tumor.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF; MDM2; PLK2; aneuploidy; pilocytic astrocytoma
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26378811 PMCID: PMC4741644 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.5571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Characterization of aneuploidy observed in pilocytic astrocytoma
a., Gains in 50 aneuploid PA samples (upper panel), frequency of specific gains, and significance (P < 0.05; Fisher's Exact Test; lower panel). b., Neuroanatomical distribution of aneuploid PA tumors favors non-cerebellar areas. c., Increased aneuploidy observed amongst adult PA tumors (P = 0.0002; Fisher's Exact Test). d., Age of patients with aneuploid and euploid PA tumors (P < 0.0076; unpaired two-tailed t-test).
Figure 2Aneuploidy is differentially associated with prominent MAPK alterations in PA with a strong effect on global gene expression
a., Frequency of aneuploidy within BRAF fusion (P = 0.0076; Fisher's Exact Test) a. and BRAF mutation (P = 0.0074; Fisher's Exact Test) b. subsets of PA tumors. c., Strong effect of aneuploidy on global gene expression in PA at FDR < 0.001.
Figure 3Comparative gene expression analysis identifies specific pathways aberrantly regulated in aneuploid tumors
a., Aneuploidy signatures demonstrate enrichment of CNS development, cell cycle and unfolded protein binding pathways. b., Chromosomal mapping of the 558 genes demonstrates enrichment within chromosomes involved in aneuploid gains. c., d., Over-expression of candidates MDM2 c. and PLK2 (d) within the aneuploid PA subgroup (P = 1.5×10−3 and FDR adjusted P-value = 3.74×10−8 respectively; ANOVA). e., Correlation of MDM2 and PLK2 expression in 122 PAs with available aneuploid data (P = 0.01).
Figure 4MDM2 expression analysis of CNS tumors and tissues reveals high expression in aneuploid PA
a., MDM2 expression is highest in aneuploid PA tumors (P = 4.0×10−109, ANOVA). NB = normal brain, CB = normal cerebellum, GBM = glioblastoma, DIPG = diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, pHGG = pediatric high-grade glioma, EP = ependymoma, PA = pilocytic astrocytoma. b., c., d., MDM2 over-expression in adult patients (>18 years) (P = 1.1×10−4) b., BRAF fusion negative (P = 8.0×10−6) c. and BRAF mutant PA (P = 9.3×10−7) d.. P-values calculated using ANOVA.
Figure 5Pathway convergence leading to aneuploidy in PA