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Epigenomic alterations define lethal CIMP-positive ependymomas of infancy

Authors :
Stephen C. Mack
Kenneth Aldape
Karin M. Muraszko
James T. Rutka
Livia Garzia
Scott L. Pomeroy
Wiesława Grajkowska
Caretha L. Creasy
Till Milde
Marcel Kool
Joanna J. Phillips
Pedro Castelo-Branco
Martin Hirst
Jan Koster
Andrey Korshunov
David Malkin
Mathieu Lupien
Theophilos Tzaridis
Xiaochong Wu
Xiaoyang Zhang
Peter Lichter
Peter B. Dirks
Loretta Lau
Sharad K. Verma
Sergio L. Pereira
Andreas E. Kulozik
Gary D. Bader
Adrian M. Dubuc
K. Nethery-Brokx
Luca Massimi
Rosario M. Piro
Uri Tabori
T. Van Meter
Jennifer Zuccaro
Hendrik Witt
Ian D. Clarke
Martin Sill
David T.W. Jones
Sonja Hutter
Khalida Wani
Scott Zuyderduyn
Marina Ryzhova
L. Gu
Eric Bouffet
Mark Barszczyk
T. J. Pugh
Patrick Sin-Chan
Renee Head
Sameer Agnihotri
Roland Eils
Paul Kongkham
Adrian M. Stütz
Daniel W. Fults
John Peacock
Kelsey C. Bertrand
Sebastian Bender
Olaf Witt
Pascal Johann
Paul A. Northcott
Boleslaw Lach
Thomas Zichner
Sebastian Stark
Annie Huang
Marc Remke
Natalie Jäger
Huriye Seker-Cin
Cynthia Hawkins
Yuan Yao
Marco Gallo
Kory Zayne
Xin Wang
Claudia C. Faria
Volker Hovestadt
Xing Fan
Nalin Gupta
Michael D. Taylor
Stefan M. Pfister
Swneke D. Bailey
Yoon Jae Cho
Florence M.G. Cavalli
William A. Weiss
Marco A. Marra
Jan O. Korbel
Stephen W. Scherer
Nada Jabado
Stephen S. Roberts
A. von Deimling
David Shih
Vijay Ramaswamy
Graduate School
Oncogenomics
Other departments
Source :
Nature, 506(7489), 445-+. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Ependymomas are common childhood brain tumours that occur throughout the nervous system, but are most common in the paediatric hindbrain. Current standard therapy comprises surgery and radiation, but not cytotoxic chemotherapy as it does not further increase survival. Whole-genome and whole-exome sequencing of 47 hindbrain ependymomas reveals an extremely low mutation rate, and zero significant recurrent somatic single nucleotide variants. Although devoid of recurrent single nucleotide variants and focal copy number aberrations, poor-prognosis hindbrain ependymomas exhibit a CpG island methylator phenotype. Transcriptional silencing driven by CpG methylation converges exclusively on targets of the Polycomb repressive complex 2 which represses expression of differentiation genes through trimethylation of H3K27. CpG island methylator phenotype-positive hindbrain ependymomas are responsive to clinical drugs that target either DNA or H3K27 methylation both in vitro and in vivo. We conclude that epigenetic modifiers are the first rational therapeutic candidates for this deadly malignancy, which is epigenetically deregulated but genetically bland.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, 506(7489), 445-+. Nature Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....644b225c861fedec58e81242df5a6dbb