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BAP1 Loss Predicts Therapeutic Vulnerability in Malignant Peritoneal Mesothelioma

Authors :
Raunak Shrestha
Colin Collins
Brian McConeghy
Yarrow J. McConnell
Ladan Fazli
Fan Mo
Robert Shukin
Faraz Hach
Andrew Churg
Hui Xue
Gregg B. Morin
S. Cenk Sahinalp
Sonal Brahmbhatt
Shawn Anderson
Andrea McCart
Andrew M. Lowy
Noushin Nabavi
Hans Adomat
Tianhui Chen
Yuzhuo Wang
Stanislav Volik
Robert H. Bell
Anne Haegert
Joshua Zhou
Mads Daugaard
Estelle Li
Dong Lin
Yen-Yi Lin
Stephane Le Bihan
Htoo Zarni Oo
Xin Dong
Antonio Hurtado-Coll
Martin E. Gleave
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Background Malignant Peritoneal Mesothelioma (PeM) is a rare and fatal cancer that originates from the peritoneal lining of the abdomen. Standard treatment of PeM is limited to cytoreductive surgery and/or chemotherapy, and no effective targeted therapies for PeM exist. Some immune checkpoint inhibitor studies of mesothelioma have found positivity to be associated with a worse prognosis. Methods To search for novel therapeutic targets for PeM, we performed a comprehensive integrative multi-omics analysis of the genome, transcriptome, and proteome of 19 treatment-naive PeM, and in particular we examined BAP1 mutation and copy-number status and its relationship to immune checkpoint inhibitor activation. Results We found that PeM could be divided into tumors with an inflammatory tumor microenvironment and those without, and that this distinction correlated with haploinsufficiency of BAP1. To further investigate the role of BAP1, we used our recently developed cancer driver gene prioritization algorithm, HIT’nDRIVE, and observed that PeM with BAP1 haploinsufficiency form a distinct molecular subtype characterized by distinct gene expression patterns of chromatin remodeling, DNA repair pathways, and immune checkpoint receptor activation. We demonstrate that this subtype is correlated with an inflammatory tumor microenvironment and thus is a candidate for immune checkpoint blockade therapies. Conclusions Our findings reveal BAP1 to be a potential, easily trackable prognostic and predictive biomarker for PeM immunotherapy that refines PeM disease classification. BAP1 stratification may improve drug response rates in ongoing phase-I and II clinical trials exploring the use of immune checkpoint blockade therapies in PeM in which BAP1 status is not considered. This integrated molecular characterization provides a comprehensive foundation for improved management of a subset of PeM patients.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....de0ecab5704f44c56a2fcb31baa999a4