Literature DB >> 31857678

High mutational burden in colorectal carcinomas with monoallelic POLE mutations: absence of allelic loss and gene promoter methylation.

Maja Hühns1, Sylvia Nürnberg2, Krishna Kumar Kandashwamy2, Claudia Maletzki3, Peter Bauer2, Friedrich Prall4.   

Abstract

Hypermutator-type colorectal carcinomas are microsatellite-stable and have point mutations of the exonuclease domain of the DNA polymerase ε or δ genes (POLE and POLD1, respectively), and an ultrahigh tumor mutational burden (TMB). These tumors may be associated with enhanced antitumor immunity and preferentially afflict younger patients, but this notion awaits validation by accrual of further cases for detailed correlative phenotypic and molecular study. We performed POLE and POLD1 exonuclease domain Sanger sequencing of 271 unselected colorectal carcinomas. We identified two microsatellite-stable tumors with somatic POLE p.P286R variants, both with ultrahigh TMBs as demonstrated by whole exome sequencing. A POLE p.V411L was found in another two microsatellite-stable tumors with ultrahigh TMBs. Two of these four tumors were from young patients (<50 years old, nonsyndromic), and there was seen a prominent T-cell infiltration in three of them. Furthermore, a somatic POLE p.A465T was found in a Lynch-associated tumor, which, hypothetically, might have enhanced TMB (which was the highest of all). In two tumors, a somatic POLE p.V411L and a POLD1 p.E279K, respectively, were found only focally, and TMBs were low. It is commonly assumed that compromise of one allele is sufficient, but this has not been specifically addressed. Therefore, resequencing of the POLE or POLD1 mutations was done with DNA from tumor cells isolated by laser-capture microdissection. This demonstrated that the mutations were monoallelic, and there was no evidence of a "second hit", neither by allelic loss (allelotyping with polymorphic microsatellite markers), nor by promoter methylation (Pyromark CpG assays). Taken together, including at least the more common DNA polymerase mutations in NGS panels allows for straightforward identification of hypermutator-type colorectal carcinomas which often may be "immunoreactive". This is important at least in young patients or when a metastasizing stage of disease has been reached and immune-checkpoint therapy enters deliberation.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31857678     DOI: 10.1038/s41379-019-0430-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mod Pathol        ISSN: 0893-3952            Impact factor:   7.842


  2 in total

1.  Chromosomally and microsatellite stable colorectal carcinomas without the CpG island methylator phenotype in a molecular classification.

Authors:  Christiane Ostwald; Michael Linnebacher; Volker Weirich; Friedrich Prall
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 5.650

2.  QuPath: Open source software for digital pathology image analysis.

Authors:  Peter Bankhead; Maurice B Loughrey; José A Fernández; Yvonne Dombrowski; Darragh G McArt; Philip D Dunne; Stephen McQuaid; Ronan T Gray; Liam J Murray; Helen G Coleman; Jacqueline A James; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Peter W Hamilton
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-12-04       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  Novel insights into the BAP1-inactivated melanocytic tumor.

Authors:  Michele Donati; Petr Martinek; Petr Steiner; Petr Grossmann; Tomas Vanecek; Liubov Kastnerova; Isabel Kolm; Martina Baneckova; Pietro Donati; Irina Kletskaya; Antonina Kalmykova; Josef Feit; Petr Blasch; Diana Szilagyi; Alfonso Baldi; Paolo Persichetti; Anna Crescenzi; Michal Michal; Dmitry V Kazakov
Journal:  Mod Pathol       Date:  2021-12-02       Impact factor: 7.842

  1 in total

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