| Literature DB >> 26956871 |
Koichi Ichimura1, Shintaro Fukushima2, Yasushi Totoki3, Yuko Matsushita2,4, Ayaka Otsuka2, Arata Tomiyama5, Tohru Niwa6, Hirokazu Takami2, Taishi Nakamura2,7, Tomonari Suzuki8, Kohei Fukuoka2,8, Takaaki Yanagisawa8,9, Kazuhiko Mishima8, Yoichi Nakazato10, Fumie Hosoda3, Yoshitaka Narita4, Soichiro Shibui4, Akihiko Yoshida11, Akitake Mukasa12, Nobuhito Saito12, Toshihiro Kumabe13,14, Masayuki Kanamori13, Teiji Tominaga13, Keiichi Kobayashi15, Saki Shimizu15, Motoo Nagane15, Toshihiko Iuchi16, Masahiro Mizoguchi17, Koji Yoshimoto17, Kaoru Tamura18, Taketoshi Maehara18, Kazuhiko Sugiyama19, Mitsutoshi Nakada20, Keiichi Sakai21, Yonehiro Kanemura22, Masahiro Nonaka22,23, Akio Asai23, Kiyotaka Yokogami24, Hideo Takeshima24, Nobutaka Kawahara7, Tatsuya Takayama25,26, Masahiro Yao27, Mamoru Kato3, Hiromi Nakamura3, Natsuko Hama3, Ryuichi Sakai5, Toshikazu Ushijima6, Masao Matsutani8, Tatsuhiro Shibata3,28, Ryo Nishikawa8.
Abstract
Germ cell tumors constitute a heterogeneous group that displays a broad spectrum of morphology. They often arise in testes; however, extragonadal occurrence, in particular brain, is not uncommon, and whether they share a common pathogenesis is unknown. We performed whole exome sequencing in 41 pairs of central nervous system germ cell tumors (CNS GCTs) of various histology and their matched normal tissues. We then performed targeted sequencing of 41 selected genes in a total of 124 CNS GCTs, 65 testicular germ cell tumors (tGCTs) and 8 metastatic GCTs to the CNS. The results showed that mutually exclusive mutations of genes involved in the MAPK pathway were most common (48.4 %), typically in KIT (27.4 %), followed by those in the PI3K pathway (12.9 %), particularly in MTOR (6.5 %), among the 124 CNS GCTs. Pure germinomas and non-germinomatous germ cell tumors (NGGCTs), as well as CNS and testicular GCTs, showed similar mutational profiles, suggesting that GCTs share a common molecular pathogenesis. Mutated MTOR identified in CNS GCTs upregulated phosphorylation of the AKT pathway proteins including AKT and 4EBP1 in nutrient-deprived conditions and enhanced soft-agar colony formation; both events were suppressed in a dose-dependent manner by addition of the MTOR inhibitor pp242. Our findings indicate that the dominant genetic drivers of GCTs regardless of the site of origin are activation of the MAPK and/or PI3K pathways by somatic point mutations. Mutated MTOR represents a potential target for novel targeted therapies for refractory GCTs.Entities:
Keywords: CNS germ cell tumors; Germinoma; MAPK; MTOR; NGGCT
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26956871 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-016-1557-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088