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Data from Genome-Wide Analysis Identifies MEN1 and MAX Mutations and a Neuroendocrine-Like Molecular Heterogeneity in Quadruple WT GIST

Authors :
Guido Biasco
Annalisa Astolfi
Antonio D. Pinna
Paolo G. Casali
Giovanni Brandi
Silvia Stacchiotti
Paola Collini
Salvatore L. Renne
Elisa Gruppioni
Annalisa Altimari
Claudio Ceccarelli
M. Giulia Pirini
Donatella Santini
Paola Paterini
Manuela Ianni
Maristella Saponara
Lidia Gatto
Elena Fumagalli
Chiara Colombo
Giovanni Grignani
Bruno Vincenzi
Alessandro Gronchi
Sabrina Angelini
Giuseppe Tarantino
Matilde De Luca
Margherita Nannini
Gloria Ravegnini
Valentina Indio
Milena Urbini
Maria A. Pantaleo
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Quadruple wild-type (WT) gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is a genomic subgroup lacking KIT/PDGFRA/RAS pathway mutations, with an intact succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) complex. The aim of this work is to perform a wide comprehensive genomic study on quadruple WT GIST to improve the characterization of these patients. We selected 14 clinical cases of quadruple WT GIST, of which nine cases showed sufficient DNA quality for whole exome sequencing (WES). NF1 alterations were identified directly by WES. Gene expression from whole transcriptome sequencing (WTS) and miRNA profiling were performed using fresh-frozen, quadruple WT GIST tissue specimens and compared with SDH and KIT/PDGFRA-mutant GIST. WES identified an average of 18 somatic mutations per sample. The most relevant somatic oncogenic mutations identified were in TP53, MEN1, MAX, FGF1R, CHD4, and CTDNN2. No somatic alterations in NF1 were identified in the analyzed cohort. A total of 247 mRNA transcripts and 66 miRNAs were differentially expressed specifically in quadruple WT GIST. Overexpression of specific molecular markers (COL22A1 and CALCRL) and genes involved in neural and neuroendocrine lineage (ASCL1, Family B GPCRs) were detected and further supported by predicted miRNA target analysis. Quadruple WT GIST show a specific genetic signature that deviates significantly from that of KIT/PDGFRA-mutant and SDH-mutant GIST. Mutations in MEN1 and MAX genes, a neural-committed phenotype and upregulation of the master neuroendocrine regulator ASCL1, support a genetic similarity with neuroendocrine tumors, with whom they also share the great variability in oncogenic driver genes.Implications: This study provides novel insights into the biology of quadruple WT GIST that potentially resembles neuroendocrine tumors and should promote the development of specific therapeutic approaches. Mol Cancer Res; 15(5); 553–62. ©2017 AACR.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ffbc7611f4312baac3a577eaecd88077
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.c.6541177