scholarly journals Whole-genome sequencing of follicular thyroid carcinomas reveal recurrent mutations in microRNA processing subunit DGCR8

Author(s):  
Johan O Paulsson ◽  
Nima Rafati ◽  
Sebastian DiLorenzo ◽  
Yi Chen ◽  
Felix Haglund ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The genomic and transcriptomic landscape of widely invasive follicular thyroid carcinomas (wiFTCs) and Hürthle cell carcinoma (HCC) are poorly characterized and subsets of these tumors lack information on genetic driver events. The aim of this study was to bridge this gap. Methods We performed whole-genome and RNA sequencing and subsequent bioinformatic analyses of 11 wiFTCs and 2 HCCs with a particularly poor prognosis, and matched normal tissue. Results All wiFTCs exhibited one or several mutations in established thyroid cancer genes, including TERT (n=4), NRAS (n=3), HRAS, KRAS, AKT, PTEN, PIK3CA, MUTYH, TSHR and MEN1 (n=1 each). MutSig2CV analysis revealed recurrent somatic mutations in FAM72D (n=3, in two wiFTCs and in a single HCC), TP53 (n=3, in two wiFTCs and a single HCC) and EIF1AX (n=3), with DGCR8 (n=2) as borderline significant. The DGCR8 mutations were recurrent p.E518K missense alterations, known to cause familial multinodular goiter via disruption of microRNA processing. Expression analyses showed reduced DGCR8 mRNA expression in FTCs in general, and the two DGCR8 mutants displayed a distinct miRNA profile compared to DGCR8 wildtypes. Copy number analyses revealed recurrent gains on chromosomes 4, 6 and 10, and fusiongene analyses revealed 27 high-quality events. Both HCCs displayed hyperploidy, which was fairly unusual in the FTC cohort. Based on the transcriptome data tumors amassed in two principal clusters. Conclusion We describe the genomic and transcriptomic landscape in wiFTCs and HCCs and identify novel recurrent mutations and copy number alterations with possible driver properties and lay the foundation for future studies.

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 113-113
Author(s):  
Sara Nasser ◽  
Jessica Aldrich ◽  
Daniel Penaherrera ◽  
Austin Christofferson ◽  
Christophe Legendre ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) is a pathological description for a plasma cell malignancy that exhibits a high degree of genetic diversity between patients. Whole genome analysis methods have elucidated multiple distinct subtypes of disease, however, we have a very limited understanding of what drives each independent subtype. To address this issue, we developed a comprehensive analysis approach to identify MM subtypes and associated genetic features in untreated patient samples from the MMRF CoMMpass study (NCT01454297). In this study we attempt to characterize each sample using whole genome (WGS), exome (WES), and RNA (RNAseq) sequencing. For this analysis we have limited the baseline cohort from the 982 patients with at least one assay completed to the 591 which are completely characterized. Most cohort level analyses focus on specific genetic aberrations such as copy number (CN) (eg. GISTIC) or somatic mutations (eg. MutSig) to identify genes which are important in the cancer. However, it is well known that cancer cells will dysregulate genes and pathways through a diverse array of mechanisms. We developed an integrated model, leveraging WGS, WES, and RNAseq data, that simultaneously considers; translocations, inversions, CN, copy neutral loss-of-heterozygosity, somatic mutations, constitutional inherited gene defects, gene expression, and in-frame genomically validated gene fusions; in a comprehensive analysis to aid in the discovery of putative oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes. We first defined two independent subtype classes within the cohort using consensus clustering on the gene expression and copy number data, which identified 12 and 14 subtypes, respectively. We also identified 59 significantly mutated genes using MutSig with a robust resampling approach. Then using our integrated approach we identified 64 putative loss-of-function (LOF) genes which have complete, bi-allelic loss, through anyone of 11 possible combinations of genetic defects in at least 1% of the cohort. These include expected tumor suppressors; TRAF3 (10.1%), DIS3 (6.9%), FAM46C (5.1%), TP53 (4.1%), RB1 (3.2%), and NF1 (1.0%). On chromosome 13 alone we identified 17 LOF genes with LOF events occuring in 15.4% of patients with the most common genes being PSPC1, BRCA2, RB1, DIS3, and TGDS. This process also identified LOF events in genes associated with 5-FU sensitivity, DPYD, and PARP inhibitor sensitivity, BRCA1, BRCA2, and STAG2 suggesting some patients may benefit from these agents. We identified 19 putative gain-of-function (GOF) genes, which had recurrent mutations at the same amino acid position, high level CN gains (6 or more copies), overexpression associated with a structural rearrangement, or inframe fusion transcripts in at least 1% of the cohort. These include expected oncogenes; NRAS, KRAS, BRAF, and myeloma specific genes like WHSC1. Interestingly this approach identified a series of genes that were not detected by MutSig such as IRF4, HIST1H1E, DUSP2, and MAP3K14 plus a number with recurrent suspect activating mutations; BMP2K, PTPN11, ALOX15, and ANKLE1. Few subtypes of MM have defined genetic events outside of gene expression subtypes defined by the common IgH translocations. Comparing genes identified in our LOF and GOF analysis with our gene expression or CN defined subtypes identified a number of associations. For instance, in the MS gene expression subtype, characterized by t(4;14), we detected the expected associations with WHSC1 and FGFR3 along with a significant enrichment of TRAF3 and DIS3 LOF events and an under representation of NRAS mutations. A gene expression group associated with a hyperdiploid karyotype and 1q gains has significantly fewer NRAS and KRAS GOF events but is enriched for TRAF3 LOF events. GOF events in IRF4 were exclusively found in the CD2 gene expression groups associated with cyclin D translocations. Interestingly, the LOF events in TGDS were exclusively found in a single CN defined subtype characterized by a hyperdiploid karyotype with 1q gains but lacking chromosome 11 trisomies. Finally, the gene expression defined proliferation (PR) subtype, which exhibits poor OS (HR = 3.996, 95% CI = 2.632 - 6.067, p < 0.001) is highly enriched for bi-allelic LOF events in RB1 and MAX. This finding provides the first genetic explanation for why patients with such diverse genetic backgrounds cluster in this high risk subtype. Disclosures Lonial: Amgen: Research Funding.


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (suppl_6) ◽  
pp. vi168-vi168
Author(s):  
Toru Umehara ◽  
Hideyuki Arita ◽  
Yoshioka Ema ◽  
Tomoko Shofuda ◽  
Manabu Kinoshita ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jake R. Conway ◽  
David Liu ◽  
Stephanie Wankowicz ◽  
Amaro Taylor-Weiner ◽  
Felix Dietlein ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (19) ◽  
pp. e122-e122
Author(s):  
Ramya Viswanathan ◽  
Elsie Cheruba ◽  
Lih Feng Cheow

Abstract Genome-wide profiling of copy number alterations and DNA methylation in single cells could enable detailed investigation into the genomic and epigenomic heterogeneity of complex cell populations. However, current methods to do this require complex sample processing and cleanup steps, lack consistency, or are biased in their genomic representation. Here, we describe a novel single-tube enzymatic method, DNA Analysis by Restriction Enzyme (DARE), to perform deterministic whole genome amplification while preserving DNA methylation information. This method was evaluated on low amounts of DNA and single cells, and provides accurate copy number aberration calling and representative DNA methylation measurement across the whole genome. Single-cell DARE is an attractive and scalable approach for concurrent genomic and epigenomic characterization of cells in a heterogeneous population.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greta Gandolfi ◽  
Caterina Longo ◽  
Elvira Moscarella ◽  
Iris Zalaudek ◽  
Valentina Sancisi ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 404-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
John S. Welch ◽  
David Larson ◽  
Li Ding ◽  
Michael D. McLellan ◽  
Tamara Lamprecht ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 404 To characterize the genomic events associated with distinct subtypes of AML, we used whole genome sequencing to compare 24 tumor/normal sample pairs from patients with normal karyotype (NK) M1-AML (12 cases) and t(15;17)-positive M3-AML (12 cases). All single nucleotide variants (SNVs), small insertions and deletions (indels), and cryptic structural variants (SVs) identified by whole genome sequencing (average coverage 28x) were validated using sample-specific custom Nimblegen capture arrays, followed by Illumina sequencing; an average coverage of 972 reads per somatic variant yielded 10,597 validated somatic variants (average 421/genome). Of these somatic mutations, 308 occurred in 286 unique genes; on average, 9.4 somatic mutations per genome had translational consequences. Several important themes emerged: 1) AML genomes contain a diverse range of recurrent mutations. We assessed the 286 mutated genes for recurrency in an additional 34 NK M1-AML cases and 9 M3-AML cases. We identified 51 recurrently mutated genes, including 37 that had not previously been described in AML; on average, each genome had 3 recurrently mutated genes (M1 = 3.2; M3 = 2.8, p = 0.32). 2) Many recurring mutations cluster in mutually exclusive pathways, suggesting pathophysiologic importance. The most commonly mutated genes were: FLT3 (36%), NPM1 (25%), DNMT3A (21%), IDH1 (18%), IDH2 (10%), TET2 (10%), ASXL1 (6%), NRAS (6%), TTN (6%), and WT1 (6%). In total, 3 genes (excluding PML-RARA) were mutated exclusively in M3 cases. 22 genes were found only in M1 cases (suggestive of alternative initiating mutations which occurred in methylation, signal transduction, and cohesin complex genes). 25 genes were mutated in both M1 and M3 genomes (suggestive of common progression mutations relevant for both subtypes). A single mutation in a cell growth/signaling gene occurred in 38 of 67 cases (FLT3, NRAS, RUNX1, KIT, CACNA1E, CADM2, CSMD1); these mutations were mutually exclusive of one another, and many of them occurred in genomes with PML-RARA, suggesting that they are progression mutations. We also identified a new leukemic pathway: mutations were observed in all four genes that encode members of the cohesin complex (STAG2, SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21), which is involved in mitotic checkpoints and chromatid separation. The cohesin mutations were mutually exclusive of each other, and collectively occur in 10% of non-M3 AML patients. 3) AML genomes also contain hundreds of benign “passenger” mutations. On average 412 somatic mutations per genome were translationally silent or occurred outside of annotated genes. Both M1 and M3 cases had similar total numbers of mutations per genome, similar mutation types (which favored C>T/G>A transitions), and a similar random distribution of variants throughout the genome (which was affected neither by coding regions nor expression levels). This is consistent with our recent observations of random “passenger” mutations in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) clones derived from normal patients (Ley et al manuscript in preparation), and suggests that most AML-associated mutations are not pathologic, but pre-existed in the HSC at the time of initial transformation. In both studies, the total number of SNVs per genome correlated positively with the age of the patient (R2 = 0.48, p = 0.001), providing a possible explanation for the increasing incidence of AML in elderly patients. 4) NK M1 and M3 AML samples are mono- or oligo-clonal. By comparing the frequency of all somatic mutations within each sample, we could identify clusters of mutations with similar frequencies (leukemic clones) and determined that the average number of clones per genome was 1.8 (M1 = 1.5; M3 = 2.2; p = 0.04). 5) t(15;17) is resolved by a non-homologous end-joining repair pathway, since nucleotide resolution of all 12 t(15;17) breakpoints revealed inconsistent micro-homologies (0 – 7 bp). Summary: These data provide a genome-wide overview of NK and t(15;17) AML and provide important new insights into AML pathogenesis. AML genomes typically contain hundreds of random, non-genic mutations, but only a handful of recurring mutated genes that are likely to be pathogenic because they cluster in mutually exclusive pathways; specific combinations of recurring mutations, as well as rare and private mutations, shape the leukemia phenotype in an individual patient, and help to explain the clinical heterogeneity of this disease. Disclosures: Westervelt: Novartis: Speakers Bureau.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 4254-4254
Author(s):  
Zachary Hunter ◽  
Lian Xu ◽  
Guang Yang ◽  
Xia Liu ◽  
Yang Cao ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Over 90% of patients with Waldenström's Macroglobulinemia (WM), and 50-80% of patients with the precursor condition, IgM MGUS, express MYD88 L265P. These findings suggest that other mutations may support progression of IgM MGUS to WM. Chromosomal aberrations including large losses in 6q are commonly present in WM patients, though the gene loss accounting for WM pathogenesis remains unclear. We therefore sought to delineate copy number alterations (CNA) and structural variants using whole genome sequencing (WGS) in order to more clearly define other important gene alterations in WM. Methods DNA from CD19+ bone marrow lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma cells (LPC) and CD19-depleted peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 10 WM patients was used for paired tumor/germline analysis by WGS. Coverage in the tumor sample was divided by the coverage in the paired germline sample for each matching position, resulting in coverage ratios for each 100Kb window. Statistically significant windows within each genome were then analyzed across the cohort by randomizing the coverage positions to assess the probability of observing the given frequency of a CNA by random chance. TaqMan quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) copy number assays was used to validate findings. Translocations were validated by Sanger sequencing across the breakpoint including flanking sequences. Results Functional annotation for identified CNAs was undertaken using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis that revealed a significant enrichment for pathways dysregulated in B-cell malignancies (Table 1). Iteratively randomizing the genomic position of CNAs not related to the chromosome 6 deletions revealed a greater than 3 fold increase in the targeting of COSMIC genes than expected by chance (p< 0.001). Affected genes in the COSMIC census were BTG1 (9/10; 90%), FOXP1 (7/10; 70%), FNBP1 (7/10; 70%), CD74 (7/10; 70%), TOP1 (6/10; 60%), MYB (5/10; 50%), CBLB (5/10; 50%), ETV6 (5/10; 50%), TNFAIP3 (5/10; 50%), FBXW7 (5/10; 50%), PRDM1 (5/10; 50%), TFE3 (4/10; 40%), JAK1 (4/10; 40%), MAML2 (4/10; 40%), FAM46C (4/10; 40%), EBF1 (4/10; 40%), STL (4/10; 40%), and BIRC3 (4/10; 40%). Other affected genes of interested included PRDM2 (8/10; 80%), HIVEP2 (8/10; 80%), ARID1B (7/10; 70%) as well as LYN (7/10; 70%). There were no singular regions of statistical significance in 6q to denote a minimally deleted region though neither of the previously suspected target genes for 6q loss, PRDM1 and TNFAIP3, were included in the regions of highest statistical significance. Losses in HIVEP2 (8/10; 80%) as well as ARID1B (7/10; 70%) and BCLAF1 (7/10; 70%) constituted the most common deletions in chromosome 6, and were present in patients with and without the large-scale losses in 6q. While no recurrent translocations were noted in this study, 2 or the 5 (40%) of the 6q deletions corresponded with translocation events. In one case, this was a result of chromothripsis focused on 6q while in the other case, a t(6;X) translocation linked to the amplification of Xq was identified. Validation studies confirmed presence of somatic deletions in BTG1 (4/5; 80%) at Chr. 12q21.33, HIVEP2 (4/5; 80%) at 6q24.2, LYN (3/5 60%) at 8q12.1, PLEKHG1 (3/5; 60%) at 6q25.1, ARID1B (3/5 60%) at 6q25.1, PDRM2 (2/5; 40%) at 1p36.21, FOXP1 (2/5; 40%) at 3p13, and MKLN1 (2/5 40%) at 7q32. As some CVAs were subclonal, we validated the correlation between the PCR relative copy number and WGS coverage predictions (rho = .926; p =2.2x10-16). Conclusions Highly recurrent CNAs are present in WM LPCs that include genes with critical regulatory roles in lymphocytic growth and survival signaling. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 4649-4649
Author(s):  
Himisha Beltran ◽  
Roman Yelensky ◽  
Garrett Frampton ◽  
Kyung Park ◽  
Sean Downing ◽  
...  

4649 Background: The genomic landscape of advanced PCA is not well characterized, partly due to limited availability of frozen metastatic tissue. This has created a gap in our knowledge of treatment related and potentially targetable genomic alterations. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate feasibility of performing NGS to molecularly characterize advanced PCA using formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue. Methods: 25 metastatic CRPC, 4 metastatic hormone naïve PCA, 3 primary localized PCA, and 18 benign matched prostates were evaluated (40mm FFPE tissue per case). High-density foci were captured and sequenced for 3230 exons of 182 cancer-related genes and 37 introns of 14 genes often rearranged in cancer to an average depth of >800x in a CLIA lab (Foundation Medicine). Recurrent mutations, copy number alterations, and fusions were validated using PCR and FISH. Results: In >90% of samples, there was sufficient DNA (≥50 ng) for analysis. Recurrent high confidence cancer alterations in CRPC included: TMPRSS2-ERG fusion (44%), PTEN loss (44%), TP53 mutation (40%), AR mutation (24%), AR gain (24%), RB mutation (28%), MYC gain (12%), and BRCA2 loss (12%). Overall 48% of CRPC harbored AR gene alterations. Additionally, there were mutations in CTNNB1 (12%), ATM (8%) and PIK3CA (4%). Copy number alterations not previously described in PCA included CCND1, CDK4/6 gains and CDKN2A/CDKN2B deletions. Hormone naïve metastatic and high risk localized PCA demonstrated similar frequency of TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusion, BRCA2 deletion, and TP53 mutations as CRPC, but AR alterations and MYC gain were not seen. Conclusions: This study demonstrates feasibility of in-depth, NGS based DNA analysis using FFPE tissue, even biopsy material. Frequent AR alterations in CRPC, mutations associated with disease progression, and potential drug targets were identified. Focused NGS has clinical potential to identify actionable genomic alterations in advanced PCA that can impact patient participation in trials as well as treatment and outcome. Treatment options include PARP inhibitors for patients with BRCA2 and ATM alterations (20% of cases) and PI3K/AKT inhibitors for PIK3CA mutations.


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