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Landscape of somatic single-nucleotide and copy-number mutations in uterine serous carcinoma

Authors :
Antonella Ravaggi
Joseph Schlessinger
Chiara Romani
Dana M. Roque
Laura Zanotti
Alessandro D. Santin
Dan-Arin Silasi
Joyce Varughese
Shrikant Mane
Titus J. Boggon
Luisa Carrara
Federica Guzzo
Paola Todeschini
Murim Choi
Masoud Azodi
Elisabetta Bandiera
Sara Gasparrini
Natalia Buza
Stefania Bellone
Peter E. Schwartz
Emiliano Cocco
John D. Overton
Eliana Bignotti
Elena Ratner
Richard P. Lifton
Amy L. Stiegler
Diana P. English
Thomas J. Rutherford
Renata A. Tassi
Siming Zhao
Ileana Bortolomai
Maysa M. Abu-Khalaf
Sergio Pecorelli
Pei Hui
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Uterine serous carcinoma (USC) is a biologically aggressive subtype of endometrial cancer. We analyzed the mutational landscape of USC by whole-exome sequencing of 57 cancers, most of which were matched to normal DNA from the same patients. The distribution of the number of protein-altering somatic mutations revealed that 52 USC tumors had fewer than 100 (median 36), whereas 5 had more than 3,000 somatic mutations. The mutations in these latter tumors showed hallmarks of defects in DNA mismatch repair. Among the remainder, we found a significantly increased burden of mutation in 14 genes. In addition to well-known cancer genes (i.e., TP53 , PIK3CA , PPP2R1A , KRAS , FBXW7 ), there were frequent mutations in CHD4/Mi2b , a member of the NuRD–chromatin-remodeling complex, and TAF1 , an element of the core TFIID transcriptional machinery. Additionally, somatic copy-number variation was found to play an important role in USC, with 13 copy-number gains and 12 copy-number losses that occurred more often than expected by chance. In addition to loss of TP53 , we found frequent deletion of a small segment of chromosome 19 containing MBD3 , also a member of the NuRD–chromatin-modification complex, and frequent amplification of chromosome segments containing PIK3CA , ERBB2 (an upstream activator of PIK3CA), and CCNE1 (a target of FBXW7-mediated ubiquitination). These findings identify frequent mutation of DNA damage, chromatin remodeling, cell cycle, and cell proliferation pathways in USC and suggest potential targets for treatment of this lethal variant of endometrial cancer.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....574eacf9edfa3a8a361e27411b71784a