| Literature DB >> 26901676 |
Susannah La-Touche1, Christophe Lemetre2, Maryou Lambros3, Elzbieta Stankiewicz1, Charlotte K Y Ng2, Britta Weigelt2, Ramzi Rajab4, Brendan Tinwell4, Cathy Corbishley4, Nick Watkin4, Dan Berney1, Jorge S Reis-Filho2,5.
Abstract
Penile squamous cell carcinoma is a rare disease, in which somatic genetic aberrations have yet to be characterized. We hypothesized that gene copy aberrations might correlate with human papillomavirus status and clinico-pathological features. We sought to determine the spectrum of gene copy number aberrations in a large series of PSCCs and to define their correlations with human papillomavirus, histopathological subtype, and tumor grade, stage and lymph node status. Seventy formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded penile squamous cell carcinomas were centrally reviewed by expert uropathologists. DNA was extracted from micro-dissected samples, subjected to PCR-based human papillomavirus assessment and genotyping (INNO-LiPA human papillomavirus Genotyping Extra Assay) and microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization using a 32K Bacterial Artificial Chromosome array platform. Sixty-four samples yielded interpretable results. Recurrent gains were observed in chromosomes 1p13.3-q44 (88%), 3p12.3-q29 (86%), 5p15.33-p11 (67%) and 8p12-q24.3 (84%). Amplifications of 5p15.33-p11 and 11p14.1-p12 were found in seven (11%) and four (6%) cases, respectively. Losses were observed in chromosomes 2q33-q37.3 (86%), 3p26.3-q11.1 (83%) and 11q12.2-q25 (81%). Although many losses and gains were similar throughout the cohort, there were small significant differences observed at specific loci, between human papillomavirus positive and negative tumors, between tumor types, and tumor grade and nodal status. These results demonstrate that despite the diversity of genetic aberrations in penile squamous cell carcinomas, there are significant correlations between the clinico-pathological data and the genetic changes that may play a role in disease natural history and progression and highlight potential driver genes, which may feature in molecular pathways for existing therapeutic agents.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26901676 PMCID: PMC4763861 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0146740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographics of PSCC cases.
| Group for Comparison | Subgroup for Comparison | Number of Cases |
|---|---|---|
| Basaloid | 7 | |
| Usual | 50 | |
| Verrucous | 7 | |
| Positive | 35 | |
| Negative | 29 | |
| Stage 1 | 4 | |
| Stage 2 | 8 | |
| Stage 2A | 28 | |
| Stage 2B | 4 | |
| Stage 3 | 7 | |
| Stage 3A | 8 | |
| Stage 4 | 5 | |
| Grade 1 | 6 | |
| Grade 2 | 17 | |
| Grade 3 | 41 | |
| Nodal N0 | 31 | |
| Nodal N1 | 16 | |
| Nodal N2 | 13 | |
| Nodal N3 | 2 | |
| No information | 2 |
Fig 1Microarray-based comparative genomic hybridisation analysis invasive penile squamous cell carcinoma components.
Genome plots obtained with the 32K bacterial artificial chromosome array platform for: (A) Case 17 (usual type), (B) Case 62(verrucous), (C) Case 26 (usual type) and (D) Case 70 (basaloid).
Fig 2Samples of invasive penile squamous cell carcinoma.
(A) Frequency plot of copy number gains and losses. (B) Frequency plot of high level gain or amplification. (C) Hierarchical cluster analysis for all cases comparing stage, HPV status, subtype, grade and nodal status. The proportion of tumors in which each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone is gained (green bars) or lost (red bars) is plotted (y axis) for each BAC clone according to its genomic position (x axis).
Fig 3HPV status of PSCCs.
Fishers Exact plots of differential copy number gains and losses or amplifications/ high level gain in HPV positive and HPV negative PSCC samples. The proportion of tumors in which each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone is gained (green bars) or lost (red bars) is plotted (y axis) for each BAC clone according to its genomic position (x axis).
Fig 4Histological subtype of PSCCs.
Fishers Exact plots of differential copy number gains and losses or amplifications/ high level gain in Basaloid and non-basaloid PSCC samples. The proportion of tumors in which each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone is gained (green bars) or lost (red bars) is plotted (y axis) for each BAC clone according to its genomic position (x axis).
Fig 5Histological grade of PSCCs.
Fishers Exact plots of differential copy number gains and losses or amplifications/ high level gain in high grade (3) and low grade (1–2) PSCC samples. The proportion of tumors in which each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone is gained (green bars) or lost (red bars) is plotted (y axis) for each BAC clone according to its genomic position (x axis).
Fig 6Clinical Stage of PSCCs.
Fishers Exact plots of differential copy number gains and losses or amplifications/ high level gain in high stage (3–4) and low stage (1–2) PSCC samples. The proportion of tumors in which each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone is gained (green bars) or lost (red bars) is plotted (y axis) for each BAC clone according to its genomic position (x axis).
Fig 7Lymph node status of PSCCs.
Fishers Exact plots of differential copy number gains and losses or amplifications/ high level gain in lymph node positive and lymph node negative PSCC samples. The proportion of tumors in which each bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone is gained (green bars) or lost (red bars) is plotted (y axis) for each BAC clone according to its genomic position (x axis).
Copy Number Changes in Squamous Cell Carcinomas.
| Type of SCC | Author | Year | Cases/ Method | HPV data (y/n) | Gains (Candidate genes) | Losses (Candidate genes) | Amplifications (Candidate genes) | Deletions (Candidate genes) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carneiro | 2008 | 30/ 32k aCGH | N | 9p | ||||
| Hirasaki | 2007 | 23/ 4K aCGH | N | |||||
| Sakai | 2010 | 51/ CGH metaphase spread | N | n/a | n/a | |||
| Shi | 2011 | 35/ 44K aCGH, RTPCR | N | |||||
| Pack | 1999 | 17/ CGH metaphase spread | N | |||||
| Tada | 2000 | 36/ CGH metaphase spread | N | |||||
| Jung | 2010 | 231 total; 91 for 4.4K aCGH | Y | n/a | n/a | |||
| Klussmann | 2009 | 60/ CGH metaphase spread | Y (28 HPV16 pos) | |||||
| Yangling | 2007 | unavailable | Y | Unavailable | unavailable | unavailable | ||
| Purdie | 2010 | 6 / 25k nsp SNP array | Y (All HPV positive) | |||||
| Huang | 2005 | 28 CSCC, 8 VSCC,7 CANCER CELL LINES | Y (25/28 CSCC, 6/8 VSCC) | |||||
| Policht | 2010 | 19/FISH | N | n/a | ||||
| Rao | 2004 | 72/ CGH metaphase spread | Y (all high risk HPV pos) | |||||
| Thomas (meta analysis) | 2003 | 293 (CSCC), 30 (VSCC) | Y (all VSCC HPV pos) | n/a | n/a | |||
| Alves | 2001 | 21/ CGH metaphase spread | N | |||||
| 64/aCGH | Y | n/a |
Comparison of copy number gains, losses, amplifications and deletions between penile, oesophageal, head and neck, vulval and cervical squamous cell carcinomas