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RUNX1-mutated families show phenotype heterogeneity and a somatic mutation profile unique to germline predisposed AML

Authors :
Andrew Dubowsky
Jinghua Feng
Amanda Wells
Stefan Fröhling
Meryl Altree
Andreas W. Schreiber
Sue Morgan
Lesley Rawlings
Richard J D'Andrea
Anna L. Brown
Chan-Eng Chong
Joëlle Michaud
Andrew H. Wei
Georges Natsoulis
Jeffrey Suttle
Rachel Susman
Cassandra Vakulin
Tilmann Bochtler
Uday R. Popat
Mark S. Currie
Paul Wang
Milena Babic
Ella J Wilkins
Christopher N. Hahn
Miriam Fine
Xiaochun Li
Jessica Burdett
Belinda Mercorella
Catherine Carmichael
Nigel Patton
Denae Henry
Marshall S. Horwitz
Peer Arts
Kerry Phillips
Julian Cooney
Sarah Moore
Sally Mapp
Nicola K. Poplawski
Thuong Ha
Sarah L King-Smith
Louise Jaensch
Shai Izraeli
Devendra K Hiwase
Julia Dobbins
Lucy A. Godley
Cecily Forsyth
Kenneth F. Bradstock
Carolyn M. Butcher
Helen Mar Fan
Grace McKavanagh
Hugh Y. Rienhoff
Hamish S. Scott
Mario Nicola
Elli Papaemmanuil
Ping Cannon
Ian D. Lewis
Claire C. Homan
Peter J. Brautigan
Alwin Krämer
Brown, Anna L
Arts, Peer
Babic, Milena
Dobbins, Julia
Feng, Jinghua
Ha, Thuong
Homan, Claire C
King-Smith, Sarah L
Li, Xiao-Chun
Brautigan, Peter
Butcher, Carolyn
D'Andrea, Richard J
Hahn, Christopher N
Scott, Hamish S
Source :
Blood advances. 4(6)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

First reported in 1999, germline runt-related transcription factor 1 (RUNX1) mutations are a well-established cause of familial platelet disorder with predisposition to myeloid malignancy (FPD-MM). We present the clinical phenotypes and genetic mutations detected in 10 novel RUNX1-mutated FPD-MM families. Genomic analyses on these families detected 2 partial gene deletions, 3 novel mutations, and 5 recurrent mutations as the germline RUNX1 alterations leading to FPD-MM. Combining genomic data from the families reported herein with aggregated published data sets resulted in 130 germline RUNX1 families, which allowed us to investigate whether specific germline mutation characteristics (type, location) could explain the large phenotypic heterogeneity between patients with familial platelet disorder and different HMs. Comparing the somatic mutational signatures between the available familial (n = 35) and published sporadic (n = 137) RUNX1-mutated AML patients showed enrichment for somatic mutations affecting the second RUNX1 allele and GATA2. Conversely, we observed a decreased number of somatic mutations affecting NRAS, SRSF2, and DNMT3A and the collective genes associated with CHIP and epigenetic regulation. This is the largest aggregation and analysis of germline RUNX1 mutations performed to date, providing a unique opportunity to examine the factors underlying phenotypic differences and disease progression from FPD to MM.

Details

ISSN :
24739537
Volume :
4
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....30cc21538186700c18e024f443315b4b