| Literature DB >> 30912334 |
Young Shin Song1, Young Joo Park1,2.
Abstract
Since the release of The Cancer Genome Atlas study of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) in 2014, additional genomic studies of differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) using massively-parallel sequencing (MPS) have been published. Recent advances in MPS technology have started to provide important insights into the molecular pathogenesis of DTC. In the genomic landscape, the most recurrently altered genes in DTC, which has a low mutational burden relative to other cancers, are BRAF, RAS, and fusion genes. Some novel driver candidates also have been identified. The frequency of these genomic alterations varies across the subtypes of DTC (classical PTC, follicular variant of PTC, and follicular thyroid carcinoma). Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter mutations are the alteration that makes the most important contribution to the progression of DTC. In the transcriptomic landscape, DTC can be classified according to its gene expression profile, and each subtype has a distinct mutational profile, intracellular signaling output, and clinicopathological characteristics. Herein, we review the results of genomic studies using MPS technology, and describe the types and frequencies of genomic alterations according to histological classifications of DTC and the characteristics and significance of the gene expression signatures of DTC.Entities:
Keywords: Genome; High-throughput nucleotide sequencing; Thyroid cancer, follicular; Thyroid cancer, papillary; Transcriptome
Year: 2019 PMID: 30912334 PMCID: PMC6435845 DOI: 10.3803/EnM.2019.34.1.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrinol Metab (Seoul) ISSN: 2093-596X
Summary of Major Genomic Studies of Differentiated Thyroid Carcinoma Analyzed Using the Massively-Parallel Sequencing Method
| Study | Subtype | Country (ethnicity) | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| TCGA (2014) [ | PTC ( | USA (mainly Caucasian) | The first integrative genomic analysis of thyroid carcinoma |
| Illustrated the detailed mutational profile of PTC | |||
| Introduced the novel conception of a thyroid carcinoma classification (BVL and RL) based on molecular characteristics | |||
| Costa et al. (2015) [ | PTC ( | France (Caucasian) | Replicated the existence of the BVL and RL subtypes identified by TCGA in thyroid carcinoma |
| Identified a novel fusion gene rearrangement, | |||
| Pan et al. (2016) [ | PTC ( | China (East Asian) | Identified a novel tumor suppressor, |
| Yoo et al. (2016) [ | PTC ( | Korea (East Asian) | The first mutational and transcriptional profiling of FA and FTC |
| FA ( | Identified a third molecular subtype of thyroid carcinoma, NBNR | ||
| FTC ( | Revealed the benign characteristics and the similarity between three follicular-patterned thyroid carcinomas (miFTC, FA, and EFVPTC) at the molecular level | ||
| Siraj et al. (2016) [ | PTC ( | Saudi Arabia (Middle Eastern) | Identified an association between |
| Lu et al. (2017) [ | PTC ( | China (East Asian) | Identified novel fusion gene arrangements ( |
| Jung et al. (2016) [ | FA ( | Korea (East Asian) | Revealed the molecular similarity between FTC and FA by analysis of evolutionary age of tumors |
| FTC ( |
TCGA, The Cancer Genome Atlas; PTC, papillary thyroid carcinoma; BVL, BRAFV600E-like; RL, RAS-like; FA, follicular adenoma; FTC, follicular thyroid carcinoma; NBNR, non-BRAF-non-RAS; miFTC, minimally-invasive follicular thyroid carcinoma; EFVPTC, encapsulated follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma.
Fig. 1Frequencies of driver mutations in differentiated thyroid carcinoma. Classical papillary thyroid carcinoma (cPTC) in the studies of (A) The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) [4] and (B) Yoo et al. [6] (upper), follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma (FVPTC) in the studies of (C) TCGA [4] and (D) Yoo et al. [6] (middle), and follicular adenoma/follicular thyroid carcinoma (FA/FTC) in the studies of (E) Yoo et al. [6] and (F) Jung et al. [35] (lower).