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The genomic and transcriptional landscape of primary central nervous system lymphoma

Authors :
Stephan E. Wolf
Matthias Schlesner
Benedikt Brors
Agnieszka Korfel
Elisa Schumann
Simone Borgoni
Andreas Unterberg
Gnana Prakash Balasubramanian
Reiner Siebert
Anja Osterloh
Fabienne Pritsch
Randi Koll
Shashwat Sahay
Yawen Wang
Clemens A. Schmitt
Stefan Wiemann
Frank L. Heppner
Ioannis Anagnostopoulos
Helena Radbruch
Lina Sieverling
Dag Moskopp
Dido Lenze
Lorenz Trümper
Julia Onken
Otmar D. Wiestler
Xavier Pastor Hostench
Daniel Hübschmann
Zuguang Gu
Roland Eils
Dilafruz Juraeva
Umut H. Toprak
Andreas Jödicke
Nagarajan Paramasivam
Martin Misch
Michael Hummel
Katharina Faust
Cristina López
Peter Vajkoczy
Josefine Radke
Sebastian Uhrig
Naveed Ishaque
Christel Herold-Mende
Debora Pehl
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Primary lymphomas of the central nervous system (PCNSL) are mainly diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) confined to the central nervous system (CNS). Despite extensive research, the molecular alterations leading to PCNSL have not been fully elucidated. In order to provide a comprehensive description of the genomic and transcriptional landscape of PCNSL, we here performed whole-genome and transcriptome sequencing and integrative analysis of 51 lymphomas presenting in the CNS, including 42 EBV-negative PCNSL, 6 secondary CNS lymphomas (SCNSL) and 3 EBV+ CNSL and matched controls. The results were compared to an independent validation cohort of 31 FFPE CNSL specimens (PCNSL, n = 19; SCNSL, n = 9; EBV+ CNSL, n = 3) as well as 39 FL and 36 systemic DLBCL cases outside the CNS. Somatic genomic alterations in PCNSL mainly affect the JAK-STAT, NFkB, and B-cell receptor signaling pathways, with hallmark recurrent mutations including MYD88 L265P (67%) and CD79B (63%), CDKN2A deletions (83%) and also non-coding RNA genes such as MALAT1 (70%), NEAT (60%), and MIR142 (80%). Kataegis events, which affected 15 of 50 identified driver genes and 21 of the top 50 mutated ncRNAs, played a decisive role in shaping the mutational repertoire of PCNSL. Compared to systemic DLBCL, PCNSLs exhibited significantly more focal deletions in 6p21 targeting the HLA-D locus that encodes for MHC class II molecules as a potential mechanism of immune evasion. Mutational signatures correlating with DNA replication and mitosis (SBS1, ID1 and ID2) were significantly enriched in PCNSL (SBS1: p = 0.0027, ID1/ID2: p < 1×10−4). Furthermore, TERT gene expression was significantly higher in PCNSL compared to ABC-DLBCL (p = 0.027). Although PCNSL share many genetic alterations with systemic ABC-DLBCL in the same signaling pathways, transcriptome analysis clearly distinguished both into distinct molecular subtypes. EBV+ CNSL cases may be distinguished by lack of recurrent mutational hotspots apart from IG and HLA-DRB loci.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........db3f5403884eb1f68d7ab5e04c375a62
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.07.30.21261280