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Integrated phospho-proteogenomic and single-cell transcriptomic analysis of meningiomas establishes robust subtyping and reveals subtype-specific immune invasion

Authors :
Manfred Westphal
Roman Sankowski
Christina Blume
Lisa Schweizer
Michel Kalamarides
Jan-Philipp Mallm
Till Milde
Hanemann Co
Wolfgang Wick
Zvi Ram
Felix Sahm
David E. Reuss
Philipp Sievers
Daniel Schrimpf
Hovestadt
Dtw Jones
Marian Christoph Neidert
Michael Platten
Damian Stichel
Olivier Ayrault
Matthias Schlesner
M Remke
Nima Etminan
Christel Herold-Mende
Helin Dogan
Hans-Georg Wirsching
Mirco Friedrich
Matthieu Peyre
Miriam Ratliff
von Deimling A
Guido Reifenberger
Michael Weller
Katja Beck
Peter Lichter
Katrin Lamszus
Konstantin Okonechnikov
M. Mann
Grossmann R
Gerhard Jungwirth
Andreas Unterberg
Mawrin C
Marco Prinz
Sophia Doll
Patel A
Daniel Picard
Stefan M. Pfister
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Meningiomas are the most frequent primary intracranial tumors. They can follow a wide clinical spectrum from benign to highly aggressive clinical course. No specific therapy exists for refractory cases or cases not amenable to resection and radiotherapy. Identification of risk of recurrence and malignant transformation for the individual patients is challenging. However, promising molecular markers and prognostic subgrouping by DNA methylation are emerging. Still, the biological underpinnings of these diagnostic subgroups are elusive, and, consequently, no novel therapeutic options arise thereof. Here we establish robust subgroups across the full landscape of meningiomas, consistent through DNA methylation, mutations, the transcriptomic, proteomic and phospho-proteomic level. Pronounced proliferative stress and DNA damage repair signals in malignant cells and in clusters exclusive to recurrent tumors are in line with their higher mitotic activity, but also provide an explanation for the accumulation of genomic instability in anaplastic meningiomas. Although homozygous deletion of CDKN2A/B is a diagnostic marker of high-grade meningioma, the expression of its gene product increased from low to non-deleted high-grade cases. Differences between subgroups in lymphocyte and myeloid cell infiltration, representing a majority of tumor mass in low-grade NF2 tumors, could be assigned to cluster-specific interaction with tumor cells. Activation to a more proinflammatory phenotype and decreased infiltration of myeloid cells in high-grade cases correlated with lower expression of CSF1, located on chromosome arm 1p, whose deletion is known as prognostic marker, with no proposed mechanism before. Our results demonstrate a robust molecular subclassification of a tumor type across multiple layers, provide insight into heterogeneous growth dynamics despite shared pathognomonic mutations, and highlight immune infiltration modulation as a novel target for meningioma therapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1b73de889b00eb6b40ce2e432c284961