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Transcriptomic silencing as a potential mechanism of treatment resistance.

Authors :
Adashek JJ
Kato S
Parulkar R
Szeto CW
Sanborn JZ
Vaske CJ
Benz SC
Reddy SK
Kurzrock R
Source :
JCI insight [JCI Insight] 2020 Jun 04; Vol. 5 (11). Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Jun 04.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has not revealed all the mechanisms underlying resistance to genomically matched drugs. Here, we performed in 1417 tumors whole-exome tumor (somatic)/normal (germline) NGS and whole-transcriptome sequencing, the latter focusing on a clinically oriented 50-gene panel in order to examine transcriptomic silencing of putative driver alterations. In this large-scale study, approximately 13% of the somatic single nucleotide variants (SNVs) were unexpectedly not expressed as RNA; 23% of patients had ≥1 nonexpressed SNV. SNV-bearing genes consistently transcribed were TP53, PIK3CA, and KRAS; those with lower transcription rates were ALK, CSF1R, ERBB4, FLT3, GNAS, HNF1A, KDR, PDGFRA, RET, and SMO. We also determined the frequency of tumor mutations being germline, rather than somatic, in these and an additional 462 tumors with tumor/normal exomes; 33.8% of germline SNVs within the gene panel were rare (not found after filtering through variant information domains) and at risk of being falsely reported as somatic. Both the frequency of silenced variant transcription and the risk of falsely identifying germline mutations as somatic/tumor related are important phenomena. Therefore, transcriptomics is a critical adjunct to genomics when interrogating patient tumors for actionable alterations, because, without expression of the target aberrations, there will likely be therapeutic resistance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2379-3708
Volume :
5
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JCI insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32493840
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.134824