| Literature DB >> 30736805 |
Elise M Bekers1,2, Astrid Eijkelenboom3, Paul Rombout3, Peter van Zwam4, Suzanne Mol5, Emiel Ruijter6, Blanca Scheijen3, Uta Flucke3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intramuscular myxoma (IM) is a hypocellular benign soft tissue neoplasm characterized by abundant myxoid stroma and occasional hypercellular areas. These tumors can, especially on biopsy material, be difficult to distinguish from low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma or low-grade myxofibrosarcoma. GNAS mutations are frequently involved in IM, in contrast to these other malignant tumors. Therefore, sensitive molecular techniques for detection of GNAS aberrations in IM, which frequently yield low amounts of DNA due to poor cellularity, will be beneficial for differential diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: GNAS mutation; Intramuscular myxoma; Next generation sequencing; TaqMan genotyping; smMIP assay
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30736805 PMCID: PMC6368757 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-019-0787-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Fluorescent reporter probes for TaqMan assay
| TaqMan assay | Reporter probe wild-type | Reporter probe mutant |
|---|---|---|
| 5’-CAGGACACG | 5’-CAGGACAC | |
| 5’-TTCGCTGCC | 5’-CGCTGCC |
Underscored nucleotides are hot-spot mutation position
Fig. 1Representative photomicrograph of heamatoxylin and eosine (H&E)-stained section of a cellular intramuscular myxoma showing its characteristic histological morphology
Patient characteristics
| Patient | Age at presentation (years) | Gender | Tumor localization | Tumor size (cm) excision | Follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 74 | M | Lower leg | 14 | 207 |
| 2 | 42 | F | Thigh | 5 | 201 |
| 3 | 51 | F | Upper arm | 0.8 | 128 |
| 4 | 45 | M | Upper leg | 5.5 | 126 |
| 5 | 40 | F | Thigh | Bx | 99 |
| 6 | 47 | F | Lower leg | 10 | 93 |
| 7 | 51 | M | Shoulder | 3 | 85 |
| 8 | 64 | M | Thigh | 5.2 | 83 |
| 9a | 53 | M | Upper arm | 2 | 83 |
| 10 | 45 | M | Thigh | 5.8 | 82 |
| 11 | 57 | F | Thigh | 9 | 67 |
| 12 | 72 | M | Thigh | 3.5 | 63 |
| 13 | 71 | M | Back | 3 | 210 |
| 14 | 55 | M | Thigh | 4 | 182 |
| 15 | 55 | M | Thigh | 4 | 157 |
| 16 | 53 | F | Upper arm | 3 | 156 |
| 17 | 47 | F | Upper arm | 5.5 | 100 |
| 18 | 38 | F | Upper arm | 2 | 108 |
| 19 | 57 | M | Thigh | 3.2 | 126 |
| 20 | 39 | F | Upper arm | 7 | 191 |
| 21 | 69 | F | Chest | 2 | 63 |
| 22 | 46 | F | Shoulder | 3.5 | 200 |
| 23 | 64 | F | Thigh | 3 | 194 |
| 24 | 46 | M | Thigh | 5 | 181 |
| 25 | 67 | F | Lower arm | 1.7 | 127 |
| 26 | 49 | F | Thigh | 3 | 73 |
| 27 | 58 | F | Thigh | 3 | 244 |
| 28b | 33 | F | Thigh | 7.5 | 224 |
| 29 | 65 | M | Thigh | 5.5 | 31 |
| 30 | 59 | F | Thigh | 7 | 12 |
| 31 | 40 | F | Upper arm | Bx | 260 |
| 32 | 71 | F | Thigh | 1 | 6 |
| 33 | 54 | M | Thigh | Bx | 2 |
Bx: biopsy, acellular myxoma, bpatient with two intramuscular myxoma samples
Fig. 2Schematic overview of the Taqman assay. In addition to the genomic DNA template, four additional oligonucleotide components are required to detect the mutation. These include an unlabeled PCR primer pair and two TaqMan probes with a FAM (F) or a VIC (V) dye label on the 5’end, in combination with a minor groove binder (MGB) and a nonfluorescent quencher (Q) on the 3’end (1). The TaqMan probes hybridize to the target DNA after denaturation between the unlabeled PCR primers. The signal from the fluorescent dye on the 5’end of a TaqMan probe is quenched by the quencher on its 3’end through fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) (2). During PCR, the AmpliTaq Gold DNA polymerase extends the unlabeled primers using the genomic DNA template strand. When the DNA polymerase reaches the TaqMan probe, it cleaves the molecule, separating the fluorescent dye from the quencher. The qPCR instrument detects fluorescence from the unquenched FAM or VIC dye in one reaction (3)
Mutation analysis intramuscular myxoma
| Sample | Taqman assay (WT/Mut/Inc) | smMIP assay (WT/Mut/Inc) | Mutation | Amino acid substitution | Mutant allele frequency (smMIP) | Concordance between Taqman and smMIP assay |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 2 | Mut | Mut | c.601C > T | p.R201C | 5% | Concordant |
| 3 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 4 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 5a | WT | Mut | c.680A > G | p.Q227R | 27% | Mutation not included in TaqMan assay |
| 6 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 7 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 13% | Concordant |
| 8 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 14% | Concordant |
| 9 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 10 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 26% | Concordant |
| 11 | Mut | NA | c.601C > T | p.R201C | Not analyzed by smMIP | |
| 12 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 13 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 14 | Mut | Mut | c.601C > T | p.R201C | 13% | Concordant |
| 15 | Mut | Inc | c.602G > A | p.R201H | Insufficient quality for smMIP assay | |
| 16 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 17 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 18 | Mut | Inc | c.602G > A | p.R201H | Insufficient quality for smMIP assay | |
| 19 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 10% | Concordant |
| 20 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 9% | Concordant |
| 21 | Mut | NA | c.602G > A | p.R201H | Not analyzed by smMIP | |
| 22 | Mut | Mut | c.601C > T | p.R201C | 15% | Concordant |
| 23 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 19% | Concordant |
| 24 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 25 | WT | WT | Concordant | |||
| 26* | WT | Mut | c.602G > T | p.R201L | 15% | Mutation not included in TaqMan assay |
| 27 | Mut | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 14% | Concordant |
| 28b | Mut | Inc | c.601C > T | p.R201C | Insufficient quality for smMIP assay | |
| 29b | Mut | Inc | c.601C > T | p.R201C | Insufficient quality for smMIP assay | |
| 30a | NA | Mut | c.602G > C | p.R201P | 12% | Not analyzed by Taqman |
| 31 | NA | Mut | c.601C > T | p.R201C | 13% | Not analyzed by Taqman |
| 32a | NA | Mut | c.601C > A | p.R201S | 14% | Not analyzed by Taqman |
| 33 | NA | Mut | c.601C > T | p.R201C | 17% | Not analyzed by Taqman |
| 34 | NA | Mut | c.602G > A | p.R201H | 7% | Not analyzed by Taqman |
WT: wild-type; Mut: mutation identified; Inc.: inconclusive; NA: not analyzed
aSamples with novel mutations in smMIP assay which are not included in the TaqMan assay
bTwo samples tested from the same patient (biopsy and excision)
Fig. 3Schematic overview of the smMIP assay. (a) First, the single molecule molecular inversion probe (smMIP) capture procedure is performed. smMIPs are long oligonucleotides consisting of two targeting arms (extension probe and ligation probe), joined by a backbone. The probe sequences are complementary to genomic DNA sequences surrounding the target region that covers a hotspot location (indicated by the yellow asterisk). During the capture reaction, smMIPs are hybridized to genomic DNA (gDNA), followed by an extension and ligation reaction, which results in circular smMIPs. Subsequent exonuclease treatment will remove all linear gDNA and unused smMIPs. Between the backbone and probe sequences are primer sequences (green bars) that are used to amplify the target region, followed by library preparation and next-generation sequencing (NGS). (b) By including a single-molecule tag of 8 random nucleotides (N8) at the end of the ligation probe, duplicate reads can be identified and merged into a consensus thereby removing PCR and sequencing artifacts. Genuine C > T and G > A mutations can be distinguished from deamination artifacts by strand specific amplification of the smMIPs. In our smMIP design, exon 8 and exon 9 of the GNAS gene are each covered by two independent smMIPs targeting both strands (smMIP1–2 and smMIP3–4, respectively)