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Somatic rearrangements causing oncogenic ectodomain deletions of FGFR1 in squamous cell lung cancer.

Authors :
Malchers F
Nogova L
van Attekum MH
Maas L
Brägelmann J
Bartenhagen C
Girard L
Bosco G
Dahmen I
Michels S
Weeden CE
Scheel AH
Meder L
Golfmann K
Schuldt P
Siemanowski J
Rehker J
Merkelbach-Bruse S
Menon R
Gautschi O
Heuckmann JM
Brambilla E
Asselin-Labat ML
Persigehl T
Minna JD
Walczak H
Ullrich RT
Fischer M
Reinhardt HC
Wolf J
Büttner R
Peifer M
George J
Thomas RK
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation [J Clin Invest] 2023 Nov 01; Vol. 133 (21). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 01.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The discovery of frequent 8p11-p12 amplifications in squamous cell lung cancer (SQLC) has fueled hopes that FGFR1, located inside this amplicon, might be a therapeutic target. In a clinical trial, only 11% of patients with 8p11 amplification (detected by FISH) responded to FGFR kinase inhibitor treatment. To understand the mechanism of FGFR1 dependency, we performed deep genomic characterization of 52 SQLCs with 8p11-p12 amplification, including 10 tumors obtained from patients who had been treated with FGFR inhibitors. We discovered somatically altered variants of FGFR1 with deletion of exons 1-8 that resulted from intragenic tail-to-tail rearrangements. These ectodomain-deficient FGFR1 variants (ΔEC-FGFR1) were expressed in the affected tumors and were tumorigenic in both in vitro and in vivo models of lung cancer. Mechanistically, breakage-fusion-bridges were the source of 8p11-p12 amplification, resulting from frequent head-to-head and tail-to-tail rearrangements. Generally, tail-to-tail rearrangements within or in close proximity upstream of FGFR1 were associated with FGFR1 dependency. Thus, the genomic events shaping the architecture of the 8p11-p12 amplicon provide a mechanistic explanation for the emergence of FGFR1-driven SQLC. Specifically, we believe that FGFR1 ectodomain-deficient and FGFR1-centered amplifications caused by tail-to-tail rearrangements are a novel somatic genomic event that might be predictive of therapeutically relevant FGFR1 dependency.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1558-8238
Volume :
133
Issue :
21
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37606995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI170217