SummaryWe collated data from 157 unpublished cases of pediatric high-grade glioma and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma and 20 publicly available datasets in an integrated analysis of >1,000 cases. We identified co-segregating mutations in histone-mutant subgroups including loss of FBXW7 in H3.3G34R/V, TOP3A rearrangements in H3.3K27M, and BCOR mutations in H3.1K27M. Histone wild-type subgroups are refined by the presence of key oncogenic events or methylation profiles more closely resembling lower-grade tumors. Genomic aberrations increase with age, highlighting the infant population as biologically and clinically distinct. Uncommon pathway dysregulation is seen in small subsets of tumors, further defining the molecular diversity of the disease, opening up avenues for biological study and providing a basis for functionally defined future treatment stratification.
Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is an aggressive brain tumor that is located in the pons and primarily affects children. Nearly 80% of DIPGs harbor mutations in histone H3 genes, wherein lysine 27 is substituted with methionine (H3K27M). H3K27M has been shown to inhibit polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), a multiprotein complex responsible for the methylation of H3 at lysine 27 (H3K27me), by binding to its catalytic subunit EZH2. Although DIPGs with the H3K27M mutation show global loss of H3K27me3, several genes retain H3K27me3. Here we describe a mouse model of DIPG in which H3K27M potentiates tumorigenesis. Using this model and primary patient-derived DIPG cell lines, we show that H3K27M-expressing tumors require PRC2 for proliferation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that small-molecule EZH2 inhibitors abolish tumor cell growth through a mechanism that is dependent on the induction of the tumor-suppressor protein p16. Genome-wide enrichment analyses show that the genes that retain H3K27me3 in H3K27M cells are strong polycomb targets. Furthermore, we find a highly significant overlap between genes that retain H3K27me3 in the DIPG mouse model and in human primary DIPGs expressing H3K27M. Taken together, these results show that residual PRC2 activity is required for the proliferation of H3K27M-expressing DIPGs, and that inhibition of EZH2 is a potential therapeutic strategy for the treatment of these tumors.
We performed next-generation sequencing of Ewing sarcoma, a pediatric cancer involving bone, characterized by expression of EWS-ETS fusions. We found remarkably few mutations. However, we discovered that loss of STAG2 expression occurs in 15% of tumors and is associated with metastatic disease, suggesting a potential genetic vulnerability in Ewing sarcoma.
Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone tumor, yet there have been no substantial advances in treatment or survival in three decades. We examined 59 tumor/normal pairs by whole-exome, whole-genome, and RNA-sequencing. Only the TP53 gene was mutated at significant frequency across all samples. The mean nonsilent somatic mutation rate was 1.2 mutations per megabase, and there was a median of 230 somatic rearrangements per tumor. Complex chains of rearrangements and localized hypermutation were detected in almost all cases. Given the intertumor heterogeneity, the extent of genomic instability, and the difficulty in acquiring a large sample size in a rare tumor, we used several methods to identify genomic events contributing to osteosarcoma survival. Pathway analysis, a heuristic analytic algorithm, a comparative oncology approach, and an shRNA screen converged on the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/mTOR) pathway as a central vulnerability for therapeutic exploitation in osteosarcoma. Osteosarcoma cell lines are responsive to pharmacologic and genetic inhibition of the PI3K/mTOR pathway both in vitro and in vivo., the most common primary bone tumor, is an aggressive cancer that affects children, adolescents, and young adults. In contrast to the improvements in 5-year overall survival for childhood cancers from 58% to 82% in the past three decades, the overall survival for pediatric OS has remained static over that same time period at 60% (1, 2).Predisposition to OS is associated with germline syndromes, including hereditary retinoblastoma and Li-Fraumeni syndrome (3, 4). OS is also seen in syndromes with mutations in RECQ helicases and SQSTM1 (5, 6). However, most cases of OS develop sporadically and are characterized by complex genomics. The first genome-wide association study conducted in OS only identified two susceptibility loci implicating one gene, GRM4, a glutamate receptor (7).Linkage with hereditary retinoblastoma and Li Fraumeni led to the recognition of recurrent somatic alterations in TP53, RB1, and genes interacting with TP53 and RB1 in OS (8, 9). Candidate-gene approaches demonstrated recurrent somatic mutations, deletions, and rearrangement affecting TP53 (9). Additional mechanisms of p53 inactivation described in OS are MDM2 and COPS3 amplification (8, 9). RB1 mutations are present in 6% and deletions or structural alterations are seen in 40% of cases (10,11). CDKN2A is deleted in 10-20% of OS (9, 12). Multiple other cancer-associated genes have been reported to be altered in OS [reviewed in Kansara and Thomas (5)]. Many of these studies SignificanceWe present, to our knowledge, the first comprehensive nextgeneration sequencing of osteosarcoma in combination with a functional genomic screen in a genetically defined mouse model of osteosarcoma. Our data provide a strong rationale for targeting the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/mammalian target of rapamycin pathway in osteosarcoma and a foundation for rational clinical trial design. These findings present an immed...
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