| Literature DB >> 27270107 |
Jiguang Wang1,2, Emanuela Cazzato3, Erik Ladewig1,2, Veronique Frattini4, Daniel I S Rosenbloom1,2, Sakellarios Zairis1,2, Francesco Abate1,2, Zhaoqi Liu1,2, Oliver Elliott1,2, Yong-Jae Shin5, Jin-Ku Lee5, In-Hee Lee5, Woong-Yang Park6, Marica Eoli3, Andrew J Blumberg7, Anna Lasorella4,8,9, Do-Hyun Nam5,10, Gaetano Finocchiaro3, Antonio Iavarone4,9,11, Raul Rabadan1,2.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and aggressive primary brain tumor. To better understand how GBM evolves, we analyzed longitudinal genomic and transcriptomic data from 114 patients. The analysis shows a highly branched evolutionary pattern in which 63% of patients experience expression-based subtype changes. The branching pattern, together with estimates of evolutionary rate, suggests that relapse-associated clones typically existed years before diagnosis. Fifteen percent of tumors present hypermutation at relapse in highly expressed genes, with a clear mutational signature. We find that 11% of recurrence tumors harbor mutations in LTBP4, which encodes a protein binding to TGF-β. Silencing LTBP4 in GBM cells leads to suppression of TGF-β activity and decreased cell proliferation. In recurrent GBM with wild-type IDH1, high LTBP4 expression is associated with worse prognosis, highlighting the TGF-β pathway as a potential therapeutic target in GBM.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27270107 PMCID: PMC5627776 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330