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Multiplex profiling of peritoneal metastases from gastric adenocarcinoma identified novel targets and molecular subtypes that predict treatment response

Authors :
Wang, Ruiping
Song, Shumei
Harada, Kazuto
Ghazanfari Amlashi, Fatemeh
Badgwell, Brian
Pizzi, Melissa Pool
Xu, Yan
Zhao, Wei
Dong, Xiaochuan
Jin, Jiangkang
Wang, Ying
Scott, Ailing
Ma, Lang
Huo, Longfei
Vicente, Diego
Blum Murphy, Mariela
Shanbhag, Namita
Tatlonghari, Ghia
Thomas, Irene
Rogers, Jane
Kobayashi, Makoto
Vykoukal, Jody
Estrella, Jeannelyn Santiano
Roy-Chowdhuri, Sinchita
Han, Guangchun
Zhang, Shaojun
Mao, Xizeng
Song, Xingzhi
Zhang, Jianhua
Gu, Jian
Johnson, Randy L
Calin, George Adrian
Peng, Guang
Lee, Ju-Seog
Hanash, Samir M
Futreal, Andrew
Wang, Zhenning
Wang, Linghua
Ajani, Jaffer A
Source :
Gut; 2020, Vol. 69 Issue: 1 p18-31, 14p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

ObjectivePeritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) occurs frequently in patients with gastric adenocarcinoma (GAC) and confers a poor prognosis. Multiplex profiling of primary GACs has been insightful but the underpinnings of PC’s development/progression remain largely unknown. We characterised exome/transcriptome/immune landscapes of PC cells from patients with GAC aiming to identify novel therapeutic targets.DesignWe performed whole-exome sequencing (WES) and whole transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) on 44 PC specimens (43 patients with PC) including an integrative analysis of WES, RNA-seq, immune profile, clinical and pathological phenotypes to dissect the molecular pathogenesis, identifying actionable targets and/or biomarkers and comparison with TCGA primary GACs.ResultsWe identified distinct alterations in PC versus primary GACs, such as more frequent CDH1 and TAF1mutations, 6q loss and chr19 gain. Alterations associated with aggressive PC phenotypes emerged with increased mutations in TP53, CDH1, TAF1and KMT2C, higher level of ‘clock-like’ mutational signature, increase in whole-genome doublings, chromosomal instability (particularly, copy number losses), reprogrammed microenvironment, enriched cell cycle pathways, MYC activation and impaired immune response. Integrated analysis identified two main molecular subtypes: ‘mesenchymal-like’ and ‘epithelial-like’ with discriminating response to chemotherapy (31% vs 71%). Patients with the less responsive ‘mesenchymal-like’ subtype had high expression of immune checkpoint T-Cell Immunoglobulin And Mucin Domain-Containing Protein 3 (TIM-3), its ligand galectin-9, V-domain Ig suppressor of T cell activation (VISTA) and transforming growth factor-β as potential therapeutic immune targets.ConclusionsWe have uncovered the unique mutational landscape, copy number alteration and gene expression profile of PC cells and defined PC molecular subtypes, which correlated with PC therapy resistance/response. Novel targets and immune checkpoint proteins have been identified with a potential to be translated into clinics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
69
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs51675259
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2018-318070