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RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma

Retinoblastoma is a rare childhood cancer of the developing retina. Most retinoblastomas initiate with biallelic inactivation of the RB1 gene through diverse mechanisms including point mutations, nucleotide insertions, deletions, loss of heterozygosity and promoter hypermethylation. Recently, a nove...

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Autores principales: McEvoy, Justina, Nagahawatte, Panduka, Finkelstein, David, Richards-Yutz, Jennifer, Valentine, Marcus, Ma, Jing, Mullighan, Charles, Song, Guangchun, Chen, Xiang, Wilson, Matthew, Brennan, Rachel, Pounds, Stanley, Becksfort, Jared, Huether, Robert, Lu, Charles, Fulton, Robert S, Fulton, Lucinda L, Hong, Xin, Dooling, David J, Ochoa, Kerri, Mardis, Elaine R, Wilson, Richard K., Easton, John, Zhang, Jinghui, Downing, James R., Ganguly, Arupa, Dyer, Michael A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3964219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24509483
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author McEvoy, Justina
Nagahawatte, Panduka
Finkelstein, David
Richards-Yutz, Jennifer
Valentine, Marcus
Ma, Jing
Mullighan, Charles
Song, Guangchun
Chen, Xiang
Wilson, Matthew
Brennan, Rachel
Pounds, Stanley
Becksfort, Jared
Huether, Robert
Lu, Charles
Fulton, Robert S
Fulton, Lucinda L
Hong, Xin
Dooling, David J
Ochoa, Kerri
Mardis, Elaine R
Wilson, Richard K.
Easton, John
Zhang, Jinghui
Downing, James R.
Ganguly, Arupa
Dyer, Michael A
author_facet McEvoy, Justina
Nagahawatte, Panduka
Finkelstein, David
Richards-Yutz, Jennifer
Valentine, Marcus
Ma, Jing
Mullighan, Charles
Song, Guangchun
Chen, Xiang
Wilson, Matthew
Brennan, Rachel
Pounds, Stanley
Becksfort, Jared
Huether, Robert
Lu, Charles
Fulton, Robert S
Fulton, Lucinda L
Hong, Xin
Dooling, David J
Ochoa, Kerri
Mardis, Elaine R
Wilson, Richard K.
Easton, John
Zhang, Jinghui
Downing, James R.
Ganguly, Arupa
Dyer, Michael A
author_sort McEvoy, Justina
collection PubMed
description Retinoblastoma is a rare childhood cancer of the developing retina. Most retinoblastomas initiate with biallelic inactivation of the RB1 gene through diverse mechanisms including point mutations, nucleotide insertions, deletions, loss of heterozygosity and promoter hypermethylation. Recently, a novel mechanism of retinoblastoma initiation was proposed. Gallie and colleagues discovered that a small proportion of retinoblastomas lack RB1 mutations and had MYCN amplification [1]. In this study, we identifed recurrent chromosomal, regional and focal genomic lesions in 94 primary retinoblastomas with their matched normal DNA using SNP 6.0 chips. We also analyzed the RB1 gene mutations and compared the mechanism of RB1 inactivation to the recurrent copy number variations in the retinoblastoma genome. In addition to the previously described focal amplification of MYCN and deletions in RB1 and BCOR, we also identifed recurrent focal amplification of OTX2, a transcription factor required for retinal photoreceptor development. We identifed 10 retinoblastomas in our cohort that lacked RB1 point mutations or indels. We performed whole genome sequencing on those 10 tumors and their corresponding germline DNA. In one of the tumors, the RB1 gene was unaltered, the MYCN gene was amplified and RB1 protein was expressed in the nuclei of the tumor cells. In addition, several tumors had complex patterns of structural variations and we identified 3 tumors with chromothripsis at the RB1 locus. This is the first report of chromothripsis as a mechanism for RB1 gene inactivation in cancer.
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spelling pubmed-39642192014-03-25 RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma McEvoy, Justina Nagahawatte, Panduka Finkelstein, David Richards-Yutz, Jennifer Valentine, Marcus Ma, Jing Mullighan, Charles Song, Guangchun Chen, Xiang Wilson, Matthew Brennan, Rachel Pounds, Stanley Becksfort, Jared Huether, Robert Lu, Charles Fulton, Robert S Fulton, Lucinda L Hong, Xin Dooling, David J Ochoa, Kerri Mardis, Elaine R Wilson, Richard K. Easton, John Zhang, Jinghui Downing, James R. Ganguly, Arupa Dyer, Michael A Oncotarget Research Paper Retinoblastoma is a rare childhood cancer of the developing retina. Most retinoblastomas initiate with biallelic inactivation of the RB1 gene through diverse mechanisms including point mutations, nucleotide insertions, deletions, loss of heterozygosity and promoter hypermethylation. Recently, a novel mechanism of retinoblastoma initiation was proposed. Gallie and colleagues discovered that a small proportion of retinoblastomas lack RB1 mutations and had MYCN amplification [1]. In this study, we identifed recurrent chromosomal, regional and focal genomic lesions in 94 primary retinoblastomas with their matched normal DNA using SNP 6.0 chips. We also analyzed the RB1 gene mutations and compared the mechanism of RB1 inactivation to the recurrent copy number variations in the retinoblastoma genome. In addition to the previously described focal amplification of MYCN and deletions in RB1 and BCOR, we also identifed recurrent focal amplification of OTX2, a transcription factor required for retinal photoreceptor development. We identifed 10 retinoblastomas in our cohort that lacked RB1 point mutations or indels. We performed whole genome sequencing on those 10 tumors and their corresponding germline DNA. In one of the tumors, the RB1 gene was unaltered, the MYCN gene was amplified and RB1 protein was expressed in the nuclei of the tumor cells. In addition, several tumors had complex patterns of structural variations and we identified 3 tumors with chromothripsis at the RB1 locus. This is the first report of chromothripsis as a mechanism for RB1 gene inactivation in cancer. Impact Journals LLC 2014-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3964219/ /pubmed/24509483 Text en Copyright: © 2014 McEvoy et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
McEvoy, Justina
Nagahawatte, Panduka
Finkelstein, David
Richards-Yutz, Jennifer
Valentine, Marcus
Ma, Jing
Mullighan, Charles
Song, Guangchun
Chen, Xiang
Wilson, Matthew
Brennan, Rachel
Pounds, Stanley
Becksfort, Jared
Huether, Robert
Lu, Charles
Fulton, Robert S
Fulton, Lucinda L
Hong, Xin
Dooling, David J
Ochoa, Kerri
Mardis, Elaine R
Wilson, Richard K.
Easton, John
Zhang, Jinghui
Downing, James R.
Ganguly, Arupa
Dyer, Michael A
RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
title RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
title_full RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
title_fullStr RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
title_full_unstemmed RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
title_short RB1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
title_sort rb1 gene inactivation by chromothripsis in human retinoblastoma
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3964219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24509483
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