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Structural variants shape driver combinations and outcomes in pediatric high-grade glioma

Authors :
Frank Dubois
Ofer Shapira
Noah Greenwald
Travis Zack
Jeremiah Wala
Jessica Tsai
Djihad Hadjadj
Alexander Crane
Ashot Harutyunyan
Kiran Kumar
Mirjam Blattner-Johnson
Jayne Vogelzang
Cecila Sousa
Kyung Shin Kang
Claire Sinai
Dayle Wang
Prasidda Khadka
Kathleen Lewis
Lan Nguyen
Hayley Malkin
Patricia Ho
Ryan O’Rourke
Rose Gold
Davy Deng
Jonathan Serrano
Matija Snuderl
Karen Wright
Susan Chi
Jacques Grill
Claudia Kleiman
Liliana Goumnerova
Nada Jabado
David Jones
Mark Kieran
Keith Ligon
Rameen Beroukhim
Pratiti Bandopadhayay
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGGs), encompassing hemispheric and diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs), remain a devastating disease. The last decade has revealed oncogenic drivers including single nucleotide variants (SNVs) in histones. However, the contribution of structural variants (SVs) to gliomagenesis has not been systematically explored due to limitations in early SV analysis approaches. Using SV algorithms, we recently created, we analyzed SVs in whole-genome sequences of 179 pHGGs including a novel cohort of treatment naïve samples–the largest WGS cohort assembled in adult or pediatric glioma. The most recurrent SVs targeted MYC isoforms and receptor tyrosine kinases, including a novel SV amplifying a MYC enhancer in the lncRNA CCDC26 in 12% of DMGs and revealing a more central role for MYC in these cancers than previously known. Applying de novo SV signature discovery, we identified five signatures including three (SVsig1-3) involving primarily simple SVs, and two (SVsig4-5) involving complex, clustered SVs. These SV signatures associated with genetic variants that differed from what was observed for SV signatures in other cancers, suggesting different links to underlying biology. Tumors with simple SV signatures were TP53 wild-type but were enriched with alterations in TP53 pathway members PPM1D and MDM4. Complex signatures were associated with direct aberrations in TP53, CDKN2A, and RB1 early in tumor evolution, and with extrachromosomal amplicons that likely occurred later. All pHGGs exhibited at least one simple SV signature but complex SV signatures were primarily restricted to subsets of H3.3K27M DMGs and hemispheric pHGGs. Importantly, DMGs with the complex SV signatures SVsig4-5 were associated with shorter overall survival independent of histone type and TP53 status. These data inform the role and impact of SVs in gliomagenesis and mechanisms that shape them.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4e0b78c6428b0c496fb0ae0854a5a9ed
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-389596/v1