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Evolution from heterozygous to homozygous KIT mutation in gastrointestinal stromal tumor correlates with the mechanism of mitotic nondisjunction and significant tumor progression

Authors :
A. K. Raymond
Jonathan C. Trent
Kelly K. Hunt
Lei L. Chen
John H. Ward
Kimberly A. Jones
Joseph A. Holden
Marsha L. Frazier
R. Lor Randall
Robert H.I. Andtbacka
Courtney L. Scaife
Haesun Choi
Jing Zhu
Wei Zhang
Elsie F. Wu
Robert S. Benjamin
Victor G. Prieto
Source :
Modern Pathology. 21:826-836
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

Activating mutation in KIT or platelet-derived growth factor-alpha can lead to gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs). Eighty-four cases from two institutes were analyzed. Of them, 62 (74%) harbored KIT mutations, 7 of which are previously unreported. One exhibited duplication from both intron 11 and exon 11, which has not been reported in KIT in human cancer. A homozygous/hemizygous KIT-activating mutation was found in 9 of the 62 cases (15%). We identified three GIST patients with heterozygous KIT-activating mutations at initial presentation, who later recurred with highly aggressive clinical courses. Molecular analysis at recurrence showed total dominance of homozygous (diploid) KIT-activating mutation within a short period of 6-13 months, suggesting an important role of oncogene homozygosity in tumor progression. Topoisomerase II is active in the S- and G(2) phases of cell cycle and is a direct and accurate proliferative indicator. Cellular and molecular analysis of serial tumor specimens obtained from consecutive surgeries or biopsy within the same patient revealed that these clones that acquired the homozygous KIT mutation exhibited an increased mitotic count and a striking fourfold increase in topoisomerase II proliferative index (percentage cells show positive topoisomerase II nuclear staining compared to the heterozygous counterpart within the same patient. KIT forms a homodimer as the initial step in signal transduction and this may account for the quadruple increase in proliferation. Using SNPs for allelotyping on the serial tumor specimens, we demonstrate that the mechanism of the second hit resulting in homozygous KIT-activating mutation and loss of heterozygosity is achieved by mitotic nondisjunction, contrary to the commonly reported mechanism of mitotic recombination.

Details

ISSN :
08933952
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Modern Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33f3413b50b5223df4be54f2f60e906d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.2008.46