Literature DB >> 26682265

Molecular dissection of ependymomas.

Kristian W Pajtler1, Stefan M Pfister1, Marcel Kool1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  brain tumor; ependymoma; molecular classification

Year:  2015        PMID: 26682265      PMCID: PMC4671940          DOI: 10.18632/oncoscience.202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncoscience        ISSN: 2331-4737


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Ependymal tumors comprise a heterogeneous group of neuroepithelial malignancies of the CNS with variable prognosis that can occur in children and adults along the entire neuroaxis, including the spine (SP), posterior fossa (PF), and supratentorial brain regions (ST). Currently, these tumors are classified and graded solely by morphological patterns, but it is commonly accepted that grading does not accurately predict their clinical behavior [1]. A powerful clinical stratification system is thus lacking to date. In a recent paper, we aimed to address this challenge by developing an unbiased, robust and uniform molecular classification of ependymal tumors that adequately reflects the full biological, clinical and histopathological heterogeneity across all age groups, grades and major anatomical CNS compartments [2]. DNA methylation patterns in tumors have been shown to represent a very stable molecular memory of the respective cell of origin throughout disease course, making them particularly suitable for tumor classification purposes. We generated genome-wide DNA methylation profiles for 500 ependymal tumors using the Illumina 450k methylation array and identified nine distinct molecular subgroups, three within each CNS compartment. One of the subgroups within each compartment was enriched with grade I subependymomas (SE), named SP-SE, PF-SE and ST-SE. Other molecular subgroups within the spine showed a relatively good concordance with the histopathological subtypes myxopapillary ependymoma (SP-MPE) and (classic) ependymoma (SP-EPN). The remaining molecular subgroups within the posterior fossa were the previously described PFA and PFB ependymomas [3,4], renamed for consistency as PF-EPN-A and PF-EPN-B. One supratentorial subgroup, termed ST-EPN-RELA, was characterized by quasi-defining C11orf95- RELA gene fusions, recently identified by Parker et al. [5] to occur in around 70% of ST ependymomas. Our molecular classification now shows that this is a distinct molecular subgroup with poor outcome in which almost all tumors harbor this fusion. RELA gene fusions were not found in any of the other subgroups. In a second ST subgroup (ST-EPN-YAP1) with good outcome we identified highly recurrent YAP1 fusions as the probably most important driver event, again not present in any of the other subgroups. We found no other recurrent gene fusions in the other subgroups, confirming previous sequencing studies [5,6]. These sequencing studies also revealed that ependymomas have overall very few mutations and in PF ependymomas no recurrent genetic hits were found thus far, suggesting that either epigenetic, copy number, or other structural alterations may drive these tumors.

Table shows key genetic, epigenetic, demographic and clinical findings in the nine molecular subgroups of ependymal tumors as identified by methylation profiling

CIN, Chromosomal instability. The molecular subgroups identified in our study were closely associated with specific age groups. Tumors of the PF-EPN-A subgroup were almost exclusively found in young children and also ST subgroups, ST-EPN-YAP1 and ST-EPN-RELA, were much more common in children. Tumors in the other subgroups were more common or exclusively found in adults. Patients with PF-EPN-A and ST-EPN-RELA tumors, together comprising two-thirds of all cases, have the worst outcome. In contrast, patients in the other subgroups have an excellent prognosis with 5-year overall survival rates close to 100%. Multivariable analysis identified molecular subgroup, level of resection and gain of chromosome arm 1q to be of independent prognostic value for both overall and progression free survival but did not show any predictive impact of WHO-grading [2]. Genome-wide DNA copy number profiles showed strong differences of DNA copy number alterations (CNAs) between the nine molecular subgroups. Most CNAs across all subgroups involved gains or losses of whole chromosomes compatible with aneuploidy. In accordance with findings by Parker et al. [5], we frequently observed patterns of chromothripsis in ST-EPN-RELA tumors, mainly involving chromosome 11, but never in any other subgroup. In contrast, ST-EPN-YAP1 tumors frequently displayed focal CNAs around the YAP1 locus, which is also on chromosome 11, while the remainder of the genome appeared to be relatively stable. Predominantly stable genomes were also found for all three molecular subependymoma subgroups (SP-SE, PF-SE, ST-SE) as well as for PF-EPN-A. The most frequent event in the latter subgroup was gain of chromosome 1q, which is an established marker for poor outcome in ependymoma [7]. Spinal subgroups SP-MPE and SP-EPN displayed various CNAs, frequently involving the 22q locus in SP-EPN tumors which includes a known oncogenic driver of this subgroup, NF2. The PF-EPN-B subgroup showed by far the highest degree of genomic instability, with many gains and losses of entire chromosomes or chromosomal arms in each tumor. Taking into account that CNAs are not occurring randomly and therefore presumably contain drivers of cancer, Mohankumar and colleagues recently reported a cross-species in vivo screen of 84 candidate oncogenes and 39 candidate tumor suppressor genes (TSG), located within 28 recurrent CNAs in ependymoma [8]. The authors identified eight new ependymoma oncogenes and ten new ependymoma TSGs, which converged on dysregulation of specific cell functions, including trafficking of growth factor receptors, FGFR and EGFR, known to be oncogenic in ependymoma. It will now be interesting to see whether any of these newly identified ependymoma oncogenes or TSGs may generate ependymomas faithfully modeling distinct subgroups. In summary, we have described a new, comprehensive and robust classification of ependymal tumors based on DNA methylation profiling. Importantly, we have also shown that subgroup classification remains stable at the time of recurrence [2]. Future application of the classification in a clinical setting might enable to assess treatment efficacies in the context of specific molecular subgroups thereby refining current treatment approaches or allowing for implementation of targeted therapies. Since the proposed risk stratification based on molecular subgrouping is superior to histological grading, it will help to adjust the aggressiveness of treatments. The molecular classification can be performed from minute amounts of DNA extracted from archived material, and is thus ideally suited for routine clinical application.
  8 in total

1.  Histopathological grading of pediatric ependymoma: reproducibility and clinical relevance in European trial cohorts.

Authors:  David W Ellison; Mehmet Kocak; Dominique Figarella-Branger; Giangaspero Felice; Godfraind Catherine; Torsten Pietsch; Didier Frappaz; Maura Massimino; Jacques Grill; James M Boyett; Richard G Grundy
Journal:  J Negat Results Biomed       Date:  2011-05-31

2.  Molecular Classification of Ependymal Tumors across All CNS Compartments, Histopathological Grades, and Age Groups.

Authors:  Kristian W Pajtler; Hendrik Witt; Martin Sill; David T W Jones; Volker Hovestadt; Fabian Kratochwil; Khalida Wani; Ruth Tatevossian; Chandanamali Punchihewa; Pascal Johann; Jüri Reimand; Hans-Jörg Warnatz; Marina Ryzhova; Steve Mack; Vijay Ramaswamy; David Capper; Leonille Schweizer; Laura Sieber; Andrea Wittmann; Zhiqin Huang; Peter van Sluis; Richard Volckmann; Jan Koster; Rogier Versteeg; Daniel Fults; Helen Toledano; Smadar Avigad; Lindsey M Hoffman; Andrew M Donson; Nicholas Foreman; Ekkehard Hewer; Karel Zitterbart; Mark Gilbert; Terri S Armstrong; Nalin Gupta; Jeffrey C Allen; Matthias A Karajannis; David Zagzag; Martin Hasselblatt; Andreas E Kulozik; Olaf Witt; V Peter Collins; Katja von Hoff; Stefan Rutkowski; Torsten Pietsch; Gary Bader; Marie-Laure Yaspo; Andreas von Deimling; Peter Lichter; Michael D Taylor; Richard Gilbertson; David W Ellison; Kenneth Aldape; Andrey Korshunov; Marcel Kool; Stefan M Pfister
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2015-05-11       Impact factor: 31.743

3.  Delineation of two clinically and molecularly distinct subgroups of posterior fossa ependymoma.

Authors:  Hendrik Witt; Stephen C Mack; Marina Ryzhova; Sebastian Bender; Martin Sill; Ruth Isserlin; Axel Benner; Thomas Hielscher; Till Milde; Marc Remke; David T W Jones; Paul A Northcott; Livia Garzia; Kelsey C Bertrand; Andrea Wittmann; Yuan Yao; Stephen S Roberts; Luca Massimi; Tim Van Meter; William A Weiss; Nalin Gupta; Wiesia Grajkowska; Boleslaw Lach; Yoon-Jae Cho; Andreas von Deimling; Andreas E Kulozik; Olaf Witt; Gary D Bader; Cynthia E Hawkins; Uri Tabori; Abhijit Guha; James T Rutka; Peter Lichter; Andrey Korshunov; Michael D Taylor; Stefan M Pfister
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2011-08-16       Impact factor: 31.743

4.  Molecular staging of intracranial ependymoma in children and adults.

Authors:  Andrey Korshunov; Hendrik Witt; Thomas Hielscher; Axel Benner; Marc Remke; Marina Ryzhova; Till Milde; Sebastian Bender; Andrea Wittmann; Anna Schöttler; Andreas E Kulozik; Olaf Witt; Andreas von Deimling; Peter Lichter; Stefan Pfister
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2010-06-01       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  A prognostic gene expression signature in infratentorial ependymoma.

Authors:  Khalida Wani; Terri S Armstrong; Elizabeth Vera-Bolanos; Aditya Raghunathan; David Ellison; Richard Gilbertson; Brian Vaillant; Stewart Goldman; Roger J Packer; Maryam Fouladi; Ian Pollack; Tom Mikkelsen; Michael Prados; Antonio Omuro; Riccardo Soffietti; Alicia Ledoux; Charmaine Wilson; Lihong Long; Mark R Gilbert; Ken Aldape
Journal:  Acta Neuropathol       Date:  2012-02-10       Impact factor: 17.088

6.  Epigenomic alterations define lethal CIMP-positive ependymomas of infancy.

Authors:  S C Mack; H Witt; R M Piro; L Gu; S Zuyderduyn; A M Stütz; X Wang; M Gallo; L Garzia; K Zayne; X Zhang; V Ramaswamy; N Jäger; D T W Jones; M Sill; T J Pugh; M Ryzhova; K M Wani; D J H Shih; R Head; M Remke; S D Bailey; T Zichner; C C Faria; M Barszczyk; S Stark; H Seker-Cin; S Hutter; P Johann; S Bender; V Hovestadt; T Tzaridis; A M Dubuc; P A Northcott; J Peacock; K C Bertrand; S Agnihotri; F M G Cavalli; I Clarke; K Nethery-Brokx; C L Creasy; S K Verma; J Koster; X Wu; Y Yao; T Milde; P Sin-Chan; J Zuccaro; L Lau; S Pereira; P Castelo-Branco; M Hirst; M A Marra; S S Roberts; D Fults; L Massimi; Y J Cho; T Van Meter; W Grajkowska; B Lach; A E Kulozik; A von Deimling; O Witt; S W Scherer; X Fan; K M Muraszko; M Kool; S L Pomeroy; N Gupta; J Phillips; A Huang; U Tabori; C Hawkins; D Malkin; P N Kongkham; W A Weiss; N Jabado; J T Rutka; E Bouffet; J O Korbel; M Lupien; K D Aldape; G D Bader; R Eils; P Lichter; P B Dirks; S M Pfister; A Korshunov; M D Taylor
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  An in vivo screen identifies ependymoma oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes.

Authors:  Kumarasamypet M Mohankumar; David S Currle; Elsie White; Nidal Boulos; Jason Dapper; Christopher Eden; Birgit Nimmervoll; Radhika Thiruvenkatam; Michele Connelly; Tanya A Kranenburg; Geoffrey Neale; Scott Olsen; Yong-Dong Wang; David Finkelstein; Karen Wright; Kirti Gupta; David W Ellison; Arzu Onar Thomas; Richard J Gilbertson
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2015-06-15       Impact factor: 38.330

8.  C11orf95-RELA fusions drive oncogenic NF-κB signalling in ependymoma.

Authors:  Matthew Parker; Kumarasamypet M Mohankumar; Chandanamali Punchihewa; Ricardo Weinlich; James D Dalton; Yongjin Li; Ryan Lee; Ruth G Tatevossian; Timothy N Phoenix; Radhika Thiruvenkatam; Elsie White; Bo Tang; Wilda Orisme; Kirti Gupta; Michael Rusch; Xiang Chen; Yuxin Li; Panduka Nagahawhatte; Erin Hedlund; David Finkelstein; Gang Wu; Sheila Shurtleff; John Easton; Kristy Boggs; Donald Yergeau; Bhavin Vadodaria; Heather L Mulder; Jared Becksfort; Jared Becksford; Pankaj Gupta; Robert Huether; Jing Ma; Guangchun Song; Amar Gajjar; Thomas Merchant; Frederick Boop; Amy A Smith; Li Ding; Charles Lu; Kerri Ochoa; David Zhao; Robert S Fulton; Lucinda L Fulton; Elaine R Mardis; Richard K Wilson; James R Downing; Douglas R Green; Jinghui Zhang; David W Ellison; Richard J Gilbertson
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 49.962

  8 in total
  8 in total

1.  MRI Phenotype of RELA-fused Pediatric Supratentorial Ependymoma.

Authors:  Johannes Nowak; Stephanie Theresa Jünger; Henner Huflage; Carolin Seidel; Annika Hohm; Lindsey A Vandergrift; Katja von Hoff; Stefan Rutkowski; Torsten Pietsch; Monika Warmuth-Metz
Journal:  Clin Neuroradiol       Date:  2018-07-19       Impact factor: 3.649

2.  Liquid biopsy detection of genomic alterations in pediatric brain tumors from cell-free DNA in peripheral blood, CSF, and urine.

Authors:  Mélanie Pagès; Denisse Rotem; Gregory Gydush; Sarah Reed; Justin Rhoades; Gavin Ha; Christopher Lo; Mark Fleharty; Madeleine Duran; Robert Jones; Sarah Becker; Michaela Haller; Claire E Sinai; Liliana Goumnerova; Todd R Golub; J Christopher Love; Keith L Ligon; Karen D Wright; Viktor A Adalsteinsson; Rameen Beroukhim; Pratiti Bandopadhayay
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2022-08-01       Impact factor: 13.029

3.  Altered MicroRNA Expression Is Associated with Tumor Grade, Molecular Background and Outcome in Childhood Infratentorial Ependymoma.

Authors:  Magdalena Zakrzewska; Wojciech Fendler; Krzysztof Zakrzewski; Beata Sikorska; Wiesława Grajkowska; Bożenna Dembowska-Bagińska; Iwona Filipek; Łukasz Stefańczyk; Paweł P Liberski
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-07-08       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 4.  The 2016 WHO Classification of Tumours of the Central Nervous System: The Major Points of Revision.

Authors:  Takashi Komori
Journal:  Neurol Med Chir (Tokyo)       Date:  2017-06-08       Impact factor: 1.742

5.  Rethinking childhood ependymoma: a retrospective, multi-center analysis reveals poor long-term overall survival.

Authors:  Amanda E Marinoff; Clement Ma; Dongjing Guo; Matija Snuderl; Karen D Wright; Peter E Manley; Hasan Al-Sayegh; Claire E Sinai; Nicole J Ullrich; Karen Marcus; Daphne Haas-Kogan; Liliana Goumnerova; Wendy B London; Mark W Kieran; Susan N Chi; Jason Fangusaro; Pratiti Bandopadhayay
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2017-07-21       Impact factor: 4.130

6.  YAP1/TAZ drives ependymoma-like tumour formation in mice.

Authors:  Noreen Eder; Federico Roncaroli; Marie-Charlotte Domart; Stuart Horswell; Felipe Andreiuolo; Helen R Flynn; Andre T Lopes; Suzanne Claxton; John-Paul Kilday; Lucy Collinson; Jun-Hao Mao; Torsten Pietsch; Barry Thompson; Ambrosius P Snijders; Sila K Ultanir
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-05-13       Impact factor: 14.919

Review 7.  Citation analysis of the most influential ependymoma research articles illustrates improved knowledge of the molecular biology of ependymoma.

Authors:  Nolan J Brown; Bayard Wilson; Brian V Lien; Alexander Himstead; Ali R Tafreshi; Shane Shahrestani; Jack Birkenbeuel; Katelynn Tran; David Horton; Anushka Paladugu; Lydia R Kirillova; Chen Yi Yang; Seth C Ransom; Ronald Sahyouni; Isaac Yang
Journal:  Neurosurg Rev       Date:  2021-10-06       Impact factor: 3.042

Review 8.  Treatment Decisions of World Health Organization Grade II and III Ependymomas in Molecular Era.

Authors:  Tae-Young Jung; Shin Jung; Hoon Kook; Hee-Jo Baek
Journal:  J Korean Neurosurg Soc       Date:  2018-05-01
  8 in total

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