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MEDULLOBLASTOMA EXOME SEQUENCING UNCOVERS SUBTYPE-SPECIFIC SOMATIC MUTATIONS

Authors :
Kristian Cibulskis
Pablo Tamayo
Peter Lichter
David T.W. Jones
Furong Yu
Michael D. Taylor
Scott L. Pomeroy
Paul A. Northcott
Scott L. Carter
Niall J. Lennon
Jill P. Mesirov
Petar Stojanov
Tenley C. Archer
Amanda G. Kautzman
Vladimir Amani
Mauricio O. Carneiro
Daniel Auclair
Thomas M. Roberts
Heidi Greulich
Shyamal Dilhan Weeraratne
Andrey Sivachenko
Aaron McKenna
Gerald R. Crabtree
Gad Getz
Michael S. Lawrence
Stacey Gabriel
James Meldrim
Stefan M. Pfister
Yoon Jae Cho
Rachel L. Erlich
Natalie Jäger
Natalia Teider
Alex H. Ramos
Matthew Meyerson
Soma Sengupta
Jessica Pierre Francois
Michael G. Ross
James Bochicchio
Erica Shefler
Trevor J. Pugh
Brian Sogoloff
Carsten Russ
Daniel Pomeranz Krummel
Source :
Nature, Nature, vol 488, iss 7409
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Medulloblastomas are the most common malignant brain tumors in children1. Identifying and understanding the genetic events that drive these tumors is critical for the development of more effective diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic strategies. Recently, our group and others described distinct molecular subtypes of medulloblastoma based on transcriptional and copy number profiles2–5. Here, we utilized whole exome hybrid capture and deep sequencing to identify somatic mutations across the coding regions of 92 primary medulloblastoma/normal pairs. Overall, medulloblastomas exhibit low mutation rates consistent with other pediatric tumors, with a median of 0.35 non-silent mutations per megabase. We identified twelve genes mutated at statistically significant frequencies, including previously known mutated genes in medulloblastoma such as CTNNB1, PTCH1, MLL2, SMARCA4 and TP53. Recurrent somatic mutations were identified in an RNA helicase gene, DDX3X, often concurrent with CTNNB1 mutations, and in the nuclear co-repressor (N-CoR) complex genes GPS2, BCOR, and LDB1, novel findings in medulloblastoma. We show that mutant DDX3X potentiates transactivation of a TCF promoter and enhances cell viability in combination with mutant but not wild type beta-catenin. Together, our study reveals the alteration of Wnt, Hedgehog, histone methyltransferase and now N-CoR pathways across medulloblastomas and within specific subtypes of this disease, and nominates the RNA helicase DDX3X as a component of pathogenic beta-catenin signaling in medulloblastoma.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
488
Issue :
7409
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23d3b8b4a2dc5a34e08ab4c3a11f5b4f