| Literature DB >> 30759284 |
Yanghao Hou1, Jorge Pinheiro2, Felix Sahm1,3,4, David E Reuss1,3, Daniel Schrimpf1,3, Damian Stichel1,3, Belén Casalini1,3, Christian Koelsche5, Philipp Sievers1,3, Annika K Wefers1,3, Annekathrin Reinhardt1,3, Azadeh Ebrahimi1,3, Francisco Fernández-Klett1,3, Stefan Pusch1,3, Jochen Meier1, Leonille Schweizer6,7, Werner Paulus8, Marco Prinz9,10,11, Christian Hartmann12, Karl H Plate13,14, Guido Reifenberger15, Torsten Pietsch16, Pascale Varlet17, Mélanie Pagès17, Ulrich Schüller18,19,20, David Scheie21, Karin de Stricker21, Stephan Frank22, Jürgen Hench22, Bianca Pollo23, Sebastian Brandner24, Andreas Unterberg25, Stefan M Pfister4,26,27, David T W Jones4,28, Andrey Korshunov1,3,4, Wolfgang Wick3,29, David Capper6,7, Ingmar Blümcke30, Andreas von Deimling31,32, Luca Bertero1,33.
Abstract
Papillary glioneuronal tumor (PGNT) is a WHO-defined brain tumor entity that poses a major diagnostic challenge. Recently, SLC44A1-PRKCA fusions have been described in PGNT. We subjected 28 brain tumors from different institutions histologically diagnosed as PGNT to molecular and morphological analysis. Array-based methylation analysis revealed that 17/28 tumors exhibited methylation profiles typical for other tumor entities, mostly dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor and hemispheric pilocytic astrocytoma. Conversely, 11/28 tumors exhibited a unique profile, thus constituting a distinct methylation class PGNT. By screening the extended Heidelberg cohort containing over 25,000 CNS tumors, we identified three additional tumors belonging to this methylation cluster but originally histologically diagnosed otherwise. RNA sequencing for the detection of SLC44A1-PRKCA fusions could be performed on 19 of the tumors, 10 of them belonging to the methylation class PGNT. In two additional cases, SLC44A1-PRKCA fusions were confirmed by FISH. We detected fusions involving PRKCA in all cases of this methylation class with material available for analyses: the canonical SLC44A1-PRKCA fusion was observed in 11/12 tumors, while the remaining case exhibited a NOTCH1-PRKCA fusion. Neither of the fusions was found in the tumors belonging to other methylation classes. Our results point towards a high misclassification rate of the morphological diagnosis PGNT and clearly demonstrate the necessity of molecular analyses. PRKCA fusions are highly diagnostic for PGNT, and detection by RNA sequencing enables the identification of rare fusion partners. Methylation analysis recognizes a unique methylation class PGNT irrespective of the nature of the PRKCA fusion.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; NOTCH1; PRKCA; Papillary glioneuronal tumor; RNA sequencing; SLC44A1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30759284 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-019-01969-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088