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Recurrent noncoding U1 snRNA mutations drive cryptic splicing in SHH medulloblastoma

Authors :
Suzuki, Hiromichi
Kumar, Sachin A.
Shuai, Shimin
Diaz-Navarro, Ander
Gutierrez-Fernandez, Ana
De Antonellis, Pasqualino
Cavalli, Florence M. G.
Juraschka, Kyle
Farooq, Hamza
Shibahara, Ichiyo
Vladoiu, Maria C.
Zhang, Jiao
Abeysundara, Namal
Przelicki, David
Skowron, Patryk
Gauer, Nicole
Luu, Betty
Daniels, Craig
Wu, Xiaochong
Forget, Antoine
Momin, Ali
Wang, Jun
Dong, Weifan
Kim, Seung-Ki
Grajkowska, Wieslawa A.
Jouvet, Anne
Fèvre-Montange, Michelle
Garrè, Maria Luisa
Nageswara Rao, Amulya A.
Giannini, Caterina
Kros, Johan M.
French, Pim J.
Jabado, Nada
Ng, Ho-Keung
Poon, Wai Sang
Eberhart, Charles G.
Pollack, Ian F.
Olson, James M.
Weiss, William A.
Kumabe, Toshihiro
López-Aguilar, Enrique
Lach, Boleslaw
Massimino, Maura
Van Meir, Erwin G.
Rubin, Joshua B.
Vibhakar, Rajeev
Chambless, Lola B.
Kijima, Noriyuki
Klekner, Almos
Bognár, László
Chan, Jennifer A.
Faria, Claudia C.
Ragoussis, Jiannis
Pfister, Stefan M.
Goldenberg, Anna
Wechsler-Reya, Robert J.
Bailey, Swneke D.
Garzia, Livia
Morrissy, A. Sorana
Marra, Marco A.
Huang, Xi
Malkin, David
Ayrault, Olivier
Ramaswamy, Vijay
Puente, Xose S.
Calarco, John A.
Stein, Lincoln
Taylor, Michael D.
Source :
Nature; October 2019, Vol. 574 Issue: 7780 p707-711, 5p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

In cancer, recurrent somatic single-nucleotide variants—which are rare in most paediatric cancers—are confined largely to protein-coding genes1–3. Here we report highly recurrent hotspot mutations (r.3A>G) of U1 spliceosomal small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs) in about 50% of Sonic hedgehog (SHH) medulloblastomas. These mutations were not present across other subgroups of medulloblastoma, and we identified these hotspot mutations in U1 snRNA in only <0.1% of 2,442 cancers, across 36 other tumour types. The mutations occur in 97% of adults (subtype SHHδ) and 25% of adolescents (subtype SHHα) with SHH medulloblastoma, but are largely absent from SHH medulloblastoma in infants. The U1 snRNA mutations occur in the 5′ splice-site binding region, and snRNA-mutant tumours have significantly disrupted RNA splicing and an excess of 5′ cryptic splicing events. Alternative splicing mediated by mutant U1 snRNA inactivates tumour-suppressor genes (PTCH1) and activates oncogenes (GLI2and CCND2), and represents a target for therapy. These U1 snRNA mutations provide an example of highly recurrent and tissue-specific mutations of a non-protein-coding gene in cancer.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
574
Issue :
7780
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs51384797
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1650-0