scholarly journals Genetic alterations and their clinical implications in gastric cancer peritoneal carcinomatosis revealed by whole-exome sequencing of malignant ascites

Oncotarget ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 8055-8066 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byungho Lim ◽  
Chan Kim ◽  
Jeong-Hwan Kim ◽  
Woo Sun Kwon ◽  
Won Seok Lee ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masoud Heidari ◽  
Hamid Gharshasbi ◽  
Alireza Isazadeh ◽  
Morteza Soleyman-Nejad ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Taskhiri ◽  
...  

Background:: Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is an autosomal recessive disorder resulting from mutations in the PKHD1 gene on chromosome 6 (6p12), a large gene spanning 470 kb of genomic DNA. Objective: The aim of the present study was to report newly identified mutations in the PKHD1 gene in two Iranian families with PKD. Materials and Methods: Genetic alterations of a 3-month-old boy and a 27-year-old girl with PKD were evaluated using whole-exome sequencing. The PCR direct sequencing was performed to analyse the co-segregation of the variants with the disease in the family. Finally, the molecular function of the identified novel mutations was evaluated by in silico study. Results: In the 3 month-old boy, a novel homozygous frameshift mutation was detected in the PKHD1 gene, which can cause PKD. Moreover, we identified three novel heterozygous missense mutations in ATIC, VPS13B, and TP53RK genes. In the 27-year-old woman, with two recurrent abortions history and two infant mortalities at early weeks due to metabolic and/or renal disease, we detected a novel missense mutation on PKHD1 gene and a novel mutation in ETFDH gene. Conclusion: In general, we have identified two novel mutations in the PKHD1 gene. These molecular findings can help accurately correlate genotype and phenotype in families with such disease in order to reduce patient births through preoperative genetic diagnosis or better management of disorders.


2017 ◽  
Vol 176 (5) ◽  
pp. K9-K14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandrine Caburet ◽  
Ronit Beck Fruchter ◽  
Bérangère Legois ◽  
Marc Fellous ◽  
Stavit Shalev ◽  
...  

Context PCOS is a heterogeneous condition characterized by hyperandrogenism and chronic anovulation and affects about 10% of women. Its etiology is poorly known, but a dysregulation of gonadotropin secretion is one of its hallmarks. Objective As the etiology of PCOS is unclear, we have performed a genome-wide analysis of a consanguineous family with three sisters diagnosed with PCOS. Methods Whole-exome sequencing and Sanger sequencing confirmation. Results Whole-exome sequencing allowed the detection of the missense variant rs104893836 located in the first coding exon of the GNRHR gene and leading to the p.Gln106Arg (p.Q106R) substitution. Sanger sequencing of all available individuals of the family confirmed that the variant was homozygous in the three affected sisters and heterozygous in both parents. Conclusions This is the first description of a GNRHR gene mutation in patients diagnosed with PCOS. Although we do not exclude a possible interaction of the identified variant with the genetic background and/or the environment, our result suggests that genetic alterations in the hypothalamo–pituitary axis may play role in the pathogenesis of PCOS.


2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 738-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bousquet ◽  
C. Noirot ◽  
F. Accadbled ◽  
J. Sales de Gauzy ◽  
M.P. Castex ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (22) ◽  
pp. 1484-1484
Author(s):  
Zhenxin Zhu ◽  
Hongbing Fu ◽  
Shengzhou Wang ◽  
Xinxin Yu ◽  
Qing You ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1377-1377
Author(s):  
Martin Neumann ◽  
Sandra Heesch ◽  
Cornelia Schlee ◽  
Stefan Schwartz ◽  
Nicola Goekbuget ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1377 Introduction: Early T-cell precursor (ETP) ALL accounting for 10% of all T-ALL cases is of special interest because of its proposed origin from early thymic progenitors with multilineage differentiation potential. ETP-ALL is associated with a poorer outcome in pediatric and adult patients. On the molecular level, ETP-ALL is characterized by a specific immunophenotype (CD1-, CD5weak, CD8-, co-expression of stem cell and/or myeloid antigens) and distinct molecular features (expression of stem cell genes, high frequency of FLT3 mutations with absence of NOTCH1 mutations). Whereas a highly heterogeneous genetic pattern was revealed by whole genome sequencing in pediatric patients, the genetic background of adult ETP-ALL remains largely unknown. Here we investigated genetic alterations in adult ETP-ALL by whole exome sequencing and subsequently analyzed specific target genes. Patients and methods: We performed whole exome sequencing of five paired (diagnosis/remission) adult ETP-ALL patients enrolled in German Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Multicenter Study Group (GMALL) trials. Using exon capturing from genomic DNA, followed by 76-bp paired-end sequencing on an Illumina Genome Analyzer IIx platform, we generated at least 5 Gb of exome sequence from each ETP-ALL and remission samples. Somatic mutations were identified by comparing the ETP-ALL with the remission exome sequence, excluding all annotated polymorphisms (dbSNP130), non-coding positions and positions with evidence of a variant in the corresponding remission samples. Candidate variants were confirmed by capillary sequencing of genomic DNA. The DNMT3A mutations status was analyzed by Sanger sequencing of exons 11–23 in additional 68 adult ETP-ALL (55 male, 13 female, median age: 38 years) as well as the mutation status of the polycomb repressor complex (PRC) genes EZH2 and SUZ12. For 52 of 68 patients clinical follow-up data were available. Results: Using whole exome sequencing we found a total of 56 non-synonymous somatic mutations or indels in the five ETP-ALL patients (range: 6 to 16 per patient). Eleven mutations/indels affected cancer genes. DNMT3A (2/5) and FAT3 (2/5) were recurrently mutated in the five patients. The DNA-methyl-transferase DNMT3A is a frequent mutational target in acute myeloid leukemia (AML; 20%), whereas FAT3 (FAT, tumor suppressor homolog 3) mutations were recently reported in ovarian carcinoma (TCGA, Nature 2011). Novel mutations identified in adult ETP-ALL involved genes in epigenetic regulation (e.g. MLL2, MLL3, BMI1), and in genes previously reported to be mutated in ETP-ALL (e.g. in JAK1, ETV6, NOTCH1, DNM2). By Sanger sequencing, we screened for DNMT3A mutations in a larger cohort of adult ETP-ALL. DNMT3A mutations were present in 11 of the 68 (16%) patients, a mutation rate similar to AML. Amino acid R882 (exon 23), the most frequently mutated amino acid in AML, was mutated in five ETP-ALL. The remaining six mutations occurred in single spots, with one exception in the ZNF or the MTF domain. Patients with a DNMT3A mutation were significantly older (median: 63 vs 37 years, P=0.016). No correlation was found between DNMT3A and FLT3 mutations (27% in DNMT3A mut pts. vs. 37% in DNMT3A wt pts., P=0.41) or NOTCH1 mutations (10% in DNMT3A mut pts. vs. 16% in DNMT3A wt pts., P=0.47). In addition, we investigated genetic alterations in epigenetic regulators including members of the polycomb repressor complex (PRC). Mutations were seen in EZH2 in 4/68 (6%), SUZ12 in 1/68 (1%) and SH2B3 in 4/69 (6%) of ETP-ALL. Interestingly, patients with at least one mutation in an epigenetic regulator gene (DNMT3A, SUZ12, SH2B3, MLL2, or EZH2) showed a trend towards an inferior survival (one-year-survival: 50% vs. 85%, P=0.08). Conclusion: Adult ETP-ALL patients display a heterogenous spectrum of mutations, particularly affecting genes involved in epigenetic regulation. The spectrum is different to pediatric patients with a lower rate of polycomb repressor complex and a higher rate of DNMT3A mutations. The higher rate of DNMT3A mutations in older patients might point to a different pathogenesis compared to pediatric ETP-ALL. Like in AML, DNMT3A mutations in adult ETP-ALL show a similar frequency, within the same hot spots and are correlated with an adverse prognostic value, underscoring the myeloid character of ETP-ALL. Thus, these data may provide a rationale to use epigenetic therapy in ETP-ALL. Disclosures: Krebs: Illumina: Honoraria. Greif:Illumina: Honoraria.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 4082-4082
Author(s):  
David Paul Kelsen ◽  
Kasmintan A. Schrader ◽  
Raya Khanin ◽  
Laura H. Tang ◽  
Erin E. Salo-Mullen ◽  
...  

4082 Background: CDH1 encodes E-cadherin; mutations (CDH1mut) increase the risk of diffuse gastric (DGC) and lobular breast cancers. Life-time risk of DGC is estimated at 80%. Current recommendations are prophylactic gastrectomy (PG) in CDH1mut carriers after age 20. Foci of DGC are found in some PG; others have none at PG, and some CDH1mut without PG never develop cancer. Identifying risk modifying alleles or other genomic events which increase the risk of DGC may improve understanding of DGC and may provide a biomarker for when to perform PG. Methods: For a Gastric Cancer Registry, we collected family pedigrees, germline DNA and FFPE tumor from CDH1mut DGC patients (pts) and their families. From 24 families, with 52 CDH1mut individuals, we identified 4 families in which a young CDH1mut pt developed advanced DGC while their CDH1mut parent and siblings had no clinical evidence of DGC. Several relatives had undergone PG with no DGC found. We hypothesize that there are risk modifying alleles and/or a “second hit” that causes variable penetrance and early onset of DGC in the young CDH1mut pts. Whole genome sequencing was performed on germ line DNA (Complete Genomics, Inc. Mountain View, CA); and whole exome sequencing on tumor specimens (MSKCC). Results: To date, 4 DGC pts and 8 relatives from 4 families have been studied. All 4 affected pts were women (ages 17, 25, 27, 42); their unaffected CDH1mut parents were 41, 51, 54, and 70 years old. The families are of Kenyan, Scandinavian, Italian, Eastern European, and Scottish origin. CDH1 mutations for the pts and their families were confirmed on WGS, and were as follows: 1451C>A(pro484his);c. 1792C>T (arg598ter);c. 1893dupA in exon 12;c. 1565+1G>A (IVS10+1G>A). Analysis of germline DNA for modifying alleles is being performed (Ingenuity Systems, Redwood, Ca.); whole exome sequencing of tumor to identify a possible "second hit" is underway. These data will be presented. Conclusions: Since at least some older pts with proven CDH-1mut do not develop DGC while their children do, CGH-1mut alone may not be sufficient to cause early onset DGC. We hope to identify the additional genomic events associated with early onset advanced DGC. Supported in part by grants from the Gerstner and DeGregorio Foundations.


2014 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 264-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangwu Guo ◽  
Juliann Chmielecki ◽  
Chandra Goparaju ◽  
Adriana Heguy ◽  
Igor Dolgalev ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e16518-e16518
Author(s):  
Jin Huang ◽  
Guofeng Zhao ◽  
Qiu Peng ◽  
Jian Ma ◽  
Pansong Li ◽  
...  

e16518 Background: Gastric linitis plastica (LP) is a rare and aggressive type of gastric cancer (GC) for which the genomic landscape and architecture have gone largely undescribed. Methods: 4 LP patients were enrolled. 10 region tumor samples of each LP patient and matched peripheral blood were collected. Matched blood cells of each patient were also collected for removing germline background Whole-exome sequencing(WES), TCR sequencing, TCGA gastric cancer and several WES articles data were used to investigate intra and inter patient genomic and immune heterogeneity. Results: All 4 LP patients were female and were in stage III. LP biopsies were sequenced with median 290.6x effective depth. A total of 11,504 somatic mutations including 6,339 non-silent mutations were identified. The median non-silent tumor mutation burden (TMB) of biopsy samples was 3.23 mutations/Mb (range from 1.36 to 4.88), which was comparable to gastric adenocarcinoma(p = 0.3). Phylogenetic trees of 4 LP patients demonstrated clear evidence of branched evolution, and the phylogenetic trees varied extensively across the four cases. The percentages of trunk mutations of 4 LP were 12.8%, 5.4%, 5.4% and 30.7%, respectively, while the proportions of trunk neoantigens were 6.2%, 2.2%, 12% and 12.4, respectivelyWhen comparing LP to other multiregion WES studies, e.g., lung adenocarcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, LP was one of the most heterogeneous tumor types. The top mutational signatures in this cohort associated with spontaneous deamination, DNA mismatch repair (MMR), and small indels at repeats etc. Furthermore, profound TCR ITH was observed in all 4 LP patients. None of the T cell clones were shared among all tumor regions and 94.23-94.41% T cells were restricted to individual tumor regions. To quantify the TCR ITH, we utilized the Morisita overlap index (MOI), which ranged from 0.34 to 0.56 across different regions within the same tumors suggesting marked inter-individual TCR repertoire heterogeneity and profound intratumor TCR heterogeneity. Conclusions: Based on whole-exome sequencing and TCR sequencing, we demonstrate that LP is highly heterogeneous for mutations, neoantigens and T cells, which contributes to its poor prognosis.


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