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Mechanisms and therapeutic implications of hypermutation in gliomas

Authors :
Florence Coulet
Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan
Marc Sanson
Adam Boynton
Aniket Shetty
Yvonne Y. Li
Tracy T. Batchelor
Marine Giry
Garrett M. Frampton
Alexandre Carpentier
Peter J. Park
Franck Bielle
Eudocia Q. Lee
Khê Hoang-Xuan
Jean-Yves Delattre
Leon Taquet
Philippe Cornu
Erell Guillerm
Andrew D. Cherniack
Liam F. Spurr
Robert E. Jones
Mehdi Touat
Rameen Beroukhim
Patrick Y. Wen
J. Bryan Iorgulescu
David Meredith
Kristine Pelton
Caroline Dehais
Radwa Sharaf
Sandro Santagata
Alex Duval
Kenin Qian
Nadia Younan
Florence Laigle-Donadey
Patricia Ho
J Ricardo McFaline-Figueroa
Juliana Bonardi
Mary Jane Lim-Fat
David A. Reardon
Capucine Baldini
Naomi Currimjee
Shakti H. Ramkissoon
Caroline Houillier
Katie Pricola Fehnel
Seth Malinowski
Dimitri Psimaras
Cristina Birzu
Charlotte Bellamy
Isidro Cortes-Ciriano
Keith L. Ligon
Jack Geduldig
Karima Mokhtari
Maite Verreault
Lee A. Albacker
Pratiti Bandopadhayay
Bertrand Mathon
Susan N. Chi
E. Antonio Chiocca
Agusti Alentorn
Dean Pavlick
Frank Dubois
Sangita Pal
Samy Ammari
Brian M. Alexander
Arnab Chakravarti
Azra H. Ligon
Sanda Alexandrescu
Ahmed Idbaih
Frédéric Beuvon
Lakshmi Nayak
Laurent Capelle
Aurélien Marabelle
Daphne A. Haas-Kogan
Raymond Y. Huang
Craig L. Bohrson
Wenya Linda Bi
Ruben Ferrer-Luna
Kin-Hoe Chow
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

A high tumour mutational burden (hypermutation) is observed in some gliomas1–5; however, the mechanisms by which hypermutation develops and whether it predicts the response to immunotherapy are poorly understood. Here we comprehensively analyse the molecular determinants of mutational burden and signatures in 10,294 gliomas. We delineate two main pathways to hypermutation: a de novo pathway associated with constitutional defects in DNA polymerase and mismatch repair (MMR) genes, and a more common post-treatment pathway, associated with acquired resistance driven by MMR defects in chemotherapy-sensitive gliomas that recur after treatment with the chemotherapy drug temozolomide. Experimentally, the mutational signature of post-treatment hypermutated gliomas was recapitulated by temozolomide-induced damage in cells with MMR deficiency. MMR-deficient gliomas were characterized by a lack of prominent T cell infiltrates, extensive intratumoral heterogeneity, poor patient survival and a low rate of response to PD-1 blockade. Moreover, although bulk analyses did not detect microsatellite instability in MMR-deficient gliomas, single-cell whole-genome sequencing analysis of post-treatment hypermutated glioma cells identified microsatellite mutations. These results show that chemotherapy can drive the acquisition of hypermutated populations without promoting a response to PD-1 blockade and supports the diagnostic use of mutational burden and signatures in cancer. Temozolomide therapy seems to lead to mismatch repair deficiency and hypermutation in gliomas, but not to an increase in response to immunotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
580
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....336eef6ce9a5c79711dafc9d15cebb54