| Literature DB >> 27411289 |
João Vinagre1,2,3, Joana Nabais4, Jorge Pinheiro5, Rui Batista1,2, Rui Caetano Oliveira6, António Pedro Gonçalves1,2, Ana Pestana1,2, Marta Reis1,2, Bárbara Mesquita1,2, Vasco Pinto1,2, Joana Lyra1,2, Maria Augusta Cipriano6, Miguel Godinho Ferreira4, José Manuel Lopes1,2,5,7, Manuel Sobrinho-Simões1,2,5,7, Paula Soares1,2,7.
Abstract
One of the hallmarks of cancer is its unlimited replicative potential that needs a compensatory mechanism for the consequential telomere erosion. Telomerase promoter (TERTp) mutations were recently reported as a novel mechanism for telomerase re-activation/expression in order to maintain telomere length. Pancreatic endocrine tumors (PETs) were so far recognized to rely mainly on the alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) mechanism. It was our objective to study if TERTp mutations were present in pancreatic endocrine tumors (PET) and could represent an alternative mechanism to ALT. TERTp mutations were detected in 7% of the cases studied and were mainly associated to patients harbouring hereditary syndromes. In vitro, using PET-derived cell lines and by luciferase reporter assay, these mutations confer a 2 to 4-fold increase in telomerase transcription activity. These novel alterations are able to recruit ETS transcription factor members, in particular GABP-α and ETV1, to the newly generated binding sites. We report for the first time TERTp mutations in PETs and PET-derived cell lines. Additionally, our data indicate that these mutations serve as an alternative mechanism and in an exclusive manner to ALT, in particular in patients with hereditary syndromes.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27411289 PMCID: PMC4944231 DOI: 10.1038/srep29714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Clinicopathological information of the patients included in this study according to the TERT promoter genotype.
| Cases studied (n, %) | 51 (93%) | 4 (7%) |
| Age (range) | 54 (14–75) | 44 (32–55) |
| 23 (45%) | — | |
| 7 (14%) | 2 (50%) | |
| 20 (39%) | 2 (50%) | |
| 1 (2%) | — | |
| 35 (69%) | 2 (50%) | |
| 14 (27%) | 2 (50%) | |
| 2 (4%) | — | |
| 16 (31%) | — | |
| 20 (39%) | 2 (50%) | |
| 12 (24%) | 2 (50%) | |
| 3 (6%) | — | |
| 18 (35%) | — | |
| 18 (35%) | 1 (25%) | |
| 15 (30%) | 3 (75%) | |
| — | — | |
| Lymph node metastasis (n, %) | 17 out of 31 (55%) | 3 (75%) |
| Distant metastasis (n, %) | 5 (10%) | 1 (25%) |
| Hereditary syndrome association | — | 3 (75%) |
n.dNot determined.
1All cases with liver metastasis, one of them with bone metastasis at the time of diagnosis.
2Liver metastasis at the time of diagnosis.
3Two MEN cases and one VHL.
Clinicopathological and molecular relevant data of the patients with PETs harboring TERT promoter mutations.
| Case number | Gender | Age | Location | PET type | Size | Microadenomas | Functional status | Germline mutations | pT | pT | Lymph node metastasis | Distant metastasis | Follow-up5 | Status at last follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F | 39 | body | NET G1 | 44 | yes | insulinoma | MEN1 p.Q453X | 3 | 3 | N1 | M0 | 107 | AWD | |
| F | 55 | body | NET G2 | 30 | no | non functional | -6 | 2 | 2 | N1 | M0 | 9 | DOD | |
| M | 51 | tail | NET G1 | 30 | yes | insulinoma | MEN1 p.A572V | 2 | 3 | Nx | M0 | 124 | DOC | |
| F | 32 | tail | NET G2 | 94 | yes | non functional | VHL p.S65W | 3 | 3 | Nx | M1 (liver) | 46 | DOD |
1years;
2mm;
3according to ENETS classification;
4according to UICC/AJCC classification; 5months; 6No MEN1 or VHL mutations were detected.
AWD – alive without disease; DOD – death of disease; DOC – death of other causes. Clinical presentations: Case 1: Primary hyperparathyroidism and insulinoma. Known family history, both the father and a sister with pancreatic tumour, a pituitary adenoma with prolactin production and primary hyperparathyroidism; Case 3: Recurrent episodes of hypoglycaemia, associated with insulinoma. No other crises following surgery. Posterior history of recurrent upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage associated with gastric ulcers. The presence of gastrinoma has never been confirmed. In both cases there was no clinical or laboratorial evidence of other functioning-type NET. Case 4: bilateral retinal angiomatosis, cervical spinal hemangioblastoma, endolymphatic sac tumour, hepatic haemangioma and multiple renal cysts.
Figure 1Tel-FISH in PETs.
Cases depicted in panels A–C were selected due to loss of expression of ATRX and DAXX as a surrogate marker of ALT positivity; these cases presented large, ultrabright and unbalanced size telomere FISH signals (marked by the arrows), a phenotype indicative of ALT. Panels D–F, represent TERTp mutated cases 1, 3 and 4, respectively. In these cases, although some robust telomeres were present, we did not detect ultra-bright foci and the telomeres were balanced in size. One of the TERTp mutated cases was excluded from this analysis (case 2) for technical reasons, since no Tel-FISH signal was detected.
Figure 2In vitro TERTp functional assays in the cell lines BON, CM and QGP1.
(A) Normalized fold change in the reporter assays activity for the vectors mock, wild-type TERTp, −124 and −146 TERTp mutated vectors; Even though we only detected the −124 mutation in our samples, we also created a reporter for −146 mutation, the second most frequent alteration in other human cancers; (B) Quantitative analysis by RT-PCR of the ChIP revealed that QGP1 (TERTp mutated) cell line, presents significant higher amount of ETS transcription factors in comparison to BON and CM cell lines (TERTp wild-type). Additionally, to ELK1 and ELK4, we detected that GABP-α and ETV1, with the ability to bind to TERTp regions. The results are an average of at least three independent experiments. Significance levels: P < 0.0001, ****; 0.0001 < P < 0.001, ***; 0.001 < P < 0.01, **; 0.01 < P < 0.05; and P ≥ 0.05, *; and not significant (ns). Values are mean ± SEM.
Figure 3PML immunofluorescence combined with Tel-FISH in U2OS, CM and QGP cell lines.
U2OS cell line represents a universal positive control for ALT mechanism. CM cell line, a TERTp wild-type cell line, presented a high co-localization of telomeric DNA with PML exhibiting an ALT positive phenotype. QGP1, the TERTp mutated cell line does not present frequent co-localization of telomeric DNA with being ALT negative. These findings recapitulate the observations in our series of PETs.