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Drug-perturbation-based stratification of blood cancer

Authors :
Satu Mustjoki
Junyan Lu
Andrzej K. Oleś
Mikolaj Slabicki
Marcus Bantscheff
Vladislav Kim
Manfred Hensel
Xiyang Liu
Tatjana Walther
Bian Wu
Christopher C. Oakes
Alexander Jethwa
Christoph Plass
Shihui Wang
Martin Sill
Anna Jauch
Emma I. Andersson
Lena Wagner
Joe Lewis
Marc Zapatka
Thomas Oellerich
Kerstin Putzker
Richard Rosenquist
Jennifer Hüllein
Andreas Mock
Leopold Sellner
Sonja Ghidelli-Disse
Sascha Dietrich
Ingo Ringshausen
Sophie Rabe
Britta Velten
Kwang Seok Lee
Christof von Kalle
Jan Dürig
Marco Herling
Anthony D. Ho
Emma Young
Lesley-Ann Sutton
Davide Rossi
Sina Oppermann
Małgorzata Oleś
Simon Anders
Wolfgang Huber
Thorsten Zenz
Michelle da Silva Liberio
Axel Benner
Marina Lukas
Christoph Lutz
Andriy Mokhir
Florence Nguyen-Khac
Katja Zirlik
Ringshausen, Ingo [0000-0002-7247-311X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Daum, Steffen
Šíša, Miroslav
Clinicum
Department of Oncology
Hematologian yksikkö
Medicum
Department of Clinical Chemistry and Hematology
University of Helsinki
HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2018.

Abstract

As new generations of targeted therapies emerge and tumor genome sequencing discovers increasingly comprehensive mutation repertoires, the functional relationships of mutations to tumor phenotypes remain largely unknown. Here, we measured ex vivo sensitivity of 246 blood cancers to 63 drugs alongside genome, transcriptome, and DNA methylome analysis to understand determinants of drug response. We assembled a primary blood cancer cell encyclopedia data set that revealed disease-specific sensitivities for each cancer. Within chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), responses to 62% of drugs were associated with 2 or more mutations, and linked the B cell receptor (BCR) pathway to trisomy 12, an important driver of CLL. Based on drug responses, the disease could be organized into phenotypic subgroups characterized by exploitable dependencies on BCR, mTOR, or MEK signaling and associated with mutations, gene expression, and DNA methylation. Fourteen percent of CLLs were driven by mTOR signaling in a non-BCR-dependent manner. Multivariate modeling revealed immunoglobulin heavy chain variable gene (IGHV) mutation status and trisomy 12 as the most important modulators of response to kinase inhibitors in CLL. Ex vivo drug responses were associated with outcome. This study overcomes the perception that most mutations do not influence drug response of cancer, and points to an updated approach to understanding tumor biology, with implications for biomarker discovery and cancer care.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a5bb1a6251d9b17401581027bb9553b6