[HTML][HTML] Sequencing of neuroblastoma identifies chromothripsis and defects in neuritogenesis genes

JJ Molenaar, J Koster, DA Zwijnenburg, P Van Sluis… - Nature, 2012 - nature.com
JJ Molenaar, J Koster, DA Zwijnenburg, P Van Sluis, LJ Valentijn, I Van Der Ploeg, M Hamdi…
Nature, 2012nature.com
Neuroblastoma is a childhood tumour of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system. The
pathogenesis has for a long time been quite enigmatic, as only very few gene defects were
identified in this often lethal tumour. Frequently detected gene alterations are limited to
MYCN amplification (20%) and ALK activations (7%),,,. Here we present a whole-genome
sequence analysis of 87 neuroblastoma of all stages. Few recurrent amino-acid-changing
mutations were found. In contrast, analysis of structural defects identified a local shredding …
Abstract
Neuroblastoma is a childhood tumour of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system. The pathogenesis has for a long time been quite enigmatic, as only very few gene defects were identified in this often lethal tumour. Frequently detected gene alterations are limited to MYCN amplification (20%) and ALK activations (7%),,,. Here we present a whole-genome sequence analysis of 87 neuroblastoma of all stages. Few recurrent amino-acid-changing mutations were found. In contrast, analysis of structural defects identified a local shredding of chromosomes, known as chromothripsis, in 18% of high-stage neuroblastoma. These tumours are associated with a poor outcome. Structural alterations recurrently affected ODZ3, PTPRD and CSMD1, which are involved in neuronal growth cone stabilization,,. In addition, ATRX, TIAM1 and a series of regulators of the Rac/Rho pathway were mutated, further implicating defects in neuritogenesis in neuroblastoma. Most tumours with defects in these genes were aggressive high-stage neuroblastomas, but did not carry MYCN amplifications. The genomic landscape of neuroblastoma therefore reveals two novel molecular defects, chromothripsis and neuritogenesis gene alterations, which frequently occur in high-risk tumours.
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