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Mutational spectrum of ATRX aberrations in neuroblastoma and associated patient and tumor characteristics

Authors :
van Gerven, Michael R.
Bozsaky, Eva
Matser, Yvette A.H.
Vosseberg, Julian
Taschner-Mandl, Sabine
Koster, Jan
Tytgat, Godelieve A.M.
Molenaar, Jan J.
van den Boogaard, Marlinde
Sub Bioinformatics
Afd Pharmaceutics
Theoretical Biology and Bioinformatics
Pharmaceutics
Laboratory Genetic Metabolic Diseases
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Center of Experimental and Molecular Medicine
Oncogenomics
CCA - Cancer biology and immunology
Paediatric Oncology
Sub Bioinformatics
Afd Pharmaceutics
Theoretical Biology and Bioinformatics
Pharmaceutics
Source :
Cancer science, 113(6), 2167-2178. Wiley-Blackwell, Cancer Science, 113(6), 2167. Wiley-Blackwell
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Neuroblastoma is the most common extracranial solid tumor in children. The chromatin remodeler ATRX is frequently mutated in high-risk patients with a poor prognosis. Although many studies have reported ATRX aberrations and the associated clinical characteristics in neuroblastoma, a comprehensive overview is currently lacking. In this study, we extensively characterize the mutational spectrum of ATRX aberrations in neuroblastoma tumors reported in previous studies and present an overview of patient and tumor characteristics. We collected the data of a total of 127 neuroblastoma patients and three cell lines with ATRX aberrations originating from 20 papers. We subdivide the ATRX aberrations into nonsense, missense, and multiexon deletions (MEDs) and show that 68% of them are MEDs. Of these MEDs, 75% are predicted to be in-frame. Furthermore, we identify a missense mutational hotspot region in the helicase domain. We also confirm that all three ATRX mutation types are more often identified in patients diagnosed at an older age, but still approximately 40% of the patients are aged 5 years or younger at diagnosis. Surprisingly, we found that 11q deletions are enriched in neuroblastomas with ATRX deletions compared to a reference cohort, but not in neuroblastomas with ATRX point mutations. Taken together, our data emphasizes a distinct ATRX mutation spectrum in neuroblastoma, which should be considered when studying molecular phenotypes and therapeutic strategies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13479032
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer science, 113(6), 2167-2178. Wiley-Blackwell, Cancer Science, 113(6), 2167. Wiley-Blackwell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b277a5221207481070e7d652613eabba