| Literature DB >> 26538165 |
Philipp Kickingereder1, Felix Sahm2,3, Alexander Radbruch1,4, Wolfgang Wick5,6, Sabine Heiland1, Andreas von Deimling2,3, Martin Bendszus1, Benedikt Wiestler1,5,6.
Abstract
The recent identification of IDH mutations in gliomas and several other cancers suggests that this pathway is involved in oncogenesis; however effector functions are complex and yet incompletely understood. To study the regulatory effects of IDH on hypoxia-inducible-factor 1-alpha (HIF1A), a driving force in hypoxia-initiated angiogenesis, we analyzed mRNA expression profiles of 288 glioma patients and show decreased expression of HIF1A targets on a single-gene and pathway level, strong inhibition of upstream regulators such as HIF1A and downstream biological functions such as angio- and vasculogenesis in IDH mutant tumors. Genotype/imaging phenotype correlation analysis with relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) MRI - a robust and non-invasive estimate of tumor angiogenesis - in 73 treatment-naive patients with low-grade and anaplastic gliomas showed that a one-unit increase in rCBV corresponded to a two-third decrease in the odds for an IDH mutation and correctly predicted IDH mutation status in 88% of patients. Together, these findings (1) show that IDH mutation status is associated with a distinct angiogenesis transcriptome signature which is non-invasively predictable with rCBV imaging and (2) highlight the potential future of radiogenomics (i.e. the correlation between cancer imaging and genomic features) towards a more accurate diagnostic workup of brain tumors.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26538165 PMCID: PMC4633672 DOI: 10.1038/srep16238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Ingenuity pathway analysis of upstream regulators (A) and downstream biological functions (B).
| (A) Upstream regulators in | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream regulator | Molecule type | p value of overlap | Activation z score | Predicted activation state |
| Vegf | Group | 4.11E-30 | −7.287 | Inhibited |
| PDGF BB | Complex | 3.94E-36 | −5.17 | Inhibited |
| Transcription regulator | 6.54E-10 | −4.65 | Inhibited | |
| Growth factor | 1.27E-10 | −4.306 | Inhibited | |
| Pdgf | Complex | 2.94E-10 | −3.646 | Inhibited |
| Growth factor | 6.79E-09 | −3.361 | Inhibited | |
| Development of blood vessel | 7.87E-30 | −4.185 | Decreased | |
| Migration of endothelial cells | 3.26E-15 | −3.799 | Decreased | |
| Vasculogenesis | 8.89E-28 | −3.717 | Decreased | |
| Movement of endothelial cells | 2.66E-16 | −3.540 | Decreased | |
| Angiogenesis | 9.39E-28 | −3.556 | Decreased | |
| Neovascularization | 1.53E-10 | −2.451 | Decreased | |
| Vascularization | 6.85E-12 | −2.319 | Decreased | |
| Development of endothelial cells | 6.58E-12 | −2.020 | Decreased | |
Both concordantly demonstrate a significant decrease in key angiogenic regulators such as HIF1A, VEGFA, PDGF or ANGPT2 (A) and consequently angiogenic biological processes (B) in IDH-1/2 mutant tumors. Full results are available in the data supplement (Supplementary Table 3).
Figure 1Gene set variation analysis (GSVA) of differentially activated gene sets identified inhibition of hypoxia, vasculo- and angiogenesis signaling pathways in IDH-1/2 mutant tumors and activation in IDH-1/2 wild-type tumors.
Rows represent samples of 288 patients with low-grade diffuse or anaplastic gliomas from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Columns represent GSVA enrichment scores for the individual gene set.
Figure 2Relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) imaging heat-map of 73 treatment-naive patients with low-grade diffuse and anaplastic gliomas.
The color of the voxel corresponds to the relative number of rCBV-voxels in each cluster and goes from white (low frequency) to purple (high frequency). Overall, IDH-1/2 wild-type tumors (top of the heat-map) clustered at a significantly higher rCBV as compared to IDH-1/2 mutant tumors (bottom of the heat-map) (see Table 2 for statistical results).
Figure 3Pre-treatment MRI (FLAIR and corresponding rCBV images) of six representative patients with IDH-1/2 mutant (a–c) and wild-type (d–f) gliomas. Histogram analysis demonstrates the distribution of rCBV-voxels, with IDH-1/2 mutant tumors clustering at substantially lower values as compared to their wild-type counterpart.
rCBV histogram analysis for differentiating IDH -1/2 mutant and wildtype tumors.
| Percentile | Mann-Whitney U test | Logistic regression | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p-value | z-score | OR | (95% CI) | p-value | AUC | (95% CI) | Correctly classified | PPV | NPV | |
| 5 | 0.00 | 3.46 | 0.07 | (0.01–0.94) | 0.05 | 66.7% | (50.2%–83.2%) | 82.2% | 82.9% | 66.7% |
| 10 | 0.05 | 1.93 | 0.08 | (0.01–0.55) | 0.01 | 71.6% | (55.8%–87.3%) | 83.6% | 84.1% | 75.0% |
| 15 | 0.01 | 2.49 | 0.08 | (0.01–0.43) | 0.00 | 74.8% | (60.1%–89.6%) | 82.2% | 83.8% | 60.0% |
| 25 | 0.00 | 2.87 | 0.09 | (0.02–0.41) | 0.00 | 79.9% | (67.5%–92.3%) | 82.2% | 83.8% | 60.0% |
| 50 | 0.00 | 4.11 | 0.17 | (0.04–0.76) | 0.02 | 85.5% | (75.2%–95.8%) | 83.6% | 86.2% | 62.5% |
| 75 | 0.00 | 4.40 | 0.23 | (0.06–0.88) | 0.03 | 88.0% | (77.2%–98.9%) | 86.3% | 87.7% | 75.0% |
| 95 | 0.00 | 4.88 | 0.40 | (0.22–0.75) | 0.00 | 92.2% | (84.8%–99.7%) | 86.3% | 88.9% | 70.0% |
| 99 | 0.00 | 4.72 | 0.56 | (0.42–0.76) | 0.00 | 90.8% | (83.9%–97.7%) | 82.2% | 85.9% | 55.6% |
Abbreviations: AUC = Area under the curve; CI = confidence interval; NPV = negative predictive value; OR = Odds ratio; PPV = positive predictive value.
Figure 4Synopsis of how IDH mutation status is linked to angiogenesis and alteration in rCBV on DSC-MRI in human glioma based on this hypothesis generating study.
In brief, mutations in cancer-associated IDH acquire neoactivity producing 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG). (R)-2HG potentiates EglN activity that mark the hypoxia inducible factor HIF1A for polyubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation, leading to decreased HIF1A activation in IDH mutant tumors, compared with their wild-type counterparts. This results in a distinct transcriptome signature induced by upregulation of hypoxia, vasculo- and angiogenesis related signaling pathways in IDH wild-type tumors, which is non-invasively detectable with rCBV imaging.