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Whole-exome sequencing reveals the spectrum of gene mutations and the clonal evolution patterns in paediatric acute myeloid leukaemia

Authors :
Etsuro Ito
Motohiro Kato
Kentaro Ohki
Kenichi Chiba
Keizo Horibe
Takashi Taga
Yasuhide Hayashi
Seishi Ogawa
Kiminori Terui
Masashi Sanada
Yuichi Shiraishi
Kazuko Kudo
Junko Takita
Kenichi Yoshida
Hiroko Tanaka
Souichi Adachi
Norio Shiba
Daisuke Tomizawa
Yasunobu Nagata
Myoung-ja Park
Yusuke Hara
Satoru Miyano
Genki Yamato
Akio Tawa
Hirokazu Arakawa
Yusuke Okuno
Akira Shimada
Source :
British Journal of Haematology. 175:476-489
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is a molecularly and clinically heterogeneous disease. Targeted sequencing efforts have identified several mutations with diagnostic and prognostic values in KIT, NPM1, CEBPA and FLT3 in both adult and paediatric AML. In addition, massively parallel sequencing enabled the discovery of recurrent mutations (i.e. IDH1/2 and DNMT3A) in adult AML. In this study, whole-exome sequencing (WES) of 22 paediatric AML patients revealed mutations in components of the cohesin complex (RAD21 and SMC3), BCORL1 and ASXL2 in addition to previously known gene mutations. We also revealed intratumoural heterogeneities in many patients, implicating multiple clonal evolution events in the development of AML. Furthermore, targeted deep sequencing in 182 paediatric AML patients identified three major categories of recurrently mutated genes: cohesion complex genes [STAG2, RAD21 and SMC3 in 17 patients (8·3%)], epigenetic regulators [ASXL1/ASXL2 in 17 patients (8·3%), BCOR/BCORL1 in 7 patients (3·4%)] and signalling molecules. We also performed WES in four patients with relapsed AML. Relapsed AML evolved from one of the subclones at the initial phase and was accompanied by many additional mutations, including common driver mutations that were absent or existed only with lower allele frequency in the diagnostic samples, indicating a multistep process causing leukaemia recurrence.

Details

ISSN :
00071048
Volume :
175
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Haematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....375123546abdcfe3be72d3de84adbf7e