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Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors

Wilms tumors (WT) with WT1 mutations do not respond well to preoperative chemotherapy by volume reduction, suggesting resistance to chemotherapy. The histologic pattern of this tumor subtype indicates an intrinsic mesenchymal differentiation potential. Currently, it is unknown whether cytotoxic trea...

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Autores principales: Royer‐Pokora, Brigitte, Beier, Manfred, Brandt, Artur, Duhme, Constanze, Busch, Maike, de Torres, Carmen, Royer, Hans‐Dieter, Mora, Jaume
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5911586/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29542868
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1379
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author Royer‐Pokora, Brigitte
Beier, Manfred
Brandt, Artur
Duhme, Constanze
Busch, Maike
de Torres, Carmen
Royer, Hans‐Dieter
Mora, Jaume
author_facet Royer‐Pokora, Brigitte
Beier, Manfred
Brandt, Artur
Duhme, Constanze
Busch, Maike
de Torres, Carmen
Royer, Hans‐Dieter
Mora, Jaume
author_sort Royer‐Pokora, Brigitte
collection PubMed
description Wilms tumors (WT) with WT1 mutations do not respond well to preoperative chemotherapy by volume reduction, suggesting resistance to chemotherapy. The histologic pattern of this tumor subtype indicates an intrinsic mesenchymal differentiation potential. Currently, it is unknown whether cytotoxic treatments can induce a terminal differentiation state as a direct comparison of untreated and chemotherapy‐treated tumor samples has not been reported so far. We conducted gene expression profiling of 11 chemotherapy and seven untreated WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors and analyzed up‐ and down‐regulated genes with bioinformatic methods. Cell culture experiments were performed from primary Wilms tumors and genetic alterations in WT1 and CTNNB1 analyzed. Chemotherapy induced MYF6 165‐fold and several MYL and MYH genes more than 20‐fold and repressed many genes from cell cycle process networks. Viable tumor cells could be cultivated when patients received less than 8 weeks of chemotherapy but not in two cases with longer treatments. In one case, viable cells could be extracted from a lung metastasis occurring after 6 months of intensive chemotherapy and radiation. Comparison of primary tumor and metastasis cells from the same patient revealed up‐regulation of RELN and TBX2,TBX4 and TBX5 genes and down‐regulation of several HOXD genes. Our analyses demonstrate that >8 weeks of chemotherapy can induce terminal myogenic differentiation in WT1‐mutant tumors, but this is not associated with volume reduction. The time needed for all tumor cells to achieve the terminal differentiation state needs to be evaluated. In contrast, prolonged treatments can result in genetic alterations leading to resistance.
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spelling pubmed-59115862018-04-30 Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors Royer‐Pokora, Brigitte Beier, Manfred Brandt, Artur Duhme, Constanze Busch, Maike de Torres, Carmen Royer, Hans‐Dieter Mora, Jaume Cancer Med Cancer Biology Wilms tumors (WT) with WT1 mutations do not respond well to preoperative chemotherapy by volume reduction, suggesting resistance to chemotherapy. The histologic pattern of this tumor subtype indicates an intrinsic mesenchymal differentiation potential. Currently, it is unknown whether cytotoxic treatments can induce a terminal differentiation state as a direct comparison of untreated and chemotherapy‐treated tumor samples has not been reported so far. We conducted gene expression profiling of 11 chemotherapy and seven untreated WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors and analyzed up‐ and down‐regulated genes with bioinformatic methods. Cell culture experiments were performed from primary Wilms tumors and genetic alterations in WT1 and CTNNB1 analyzed. Chemotherapy induced MYF6 165‐fold and several MYL and MYH genes more than 20‐fold and repressed many genes from cell cycle process networks. Viable tumor cells could be cultivated when patients received less than 8 weeks of chemotherapy but not in two cases with longer treatments. In one case, viable cells could be extracted from a lung metastasis occurring after 6 months of intensive chemotherapy and radiation. Comparison of primary tumor and metastasis cells from the same patient revealed up‐regulation of RELN and TBX2,TBX4 and TBX5 genes and down‐regulation of several HOXD genes. Our analyses demonstrate that >8 weeks of chemotherapy can induce terminal myogenic differentiation in WT1‐mutant tumors, but this is not associated with volume reduction. The time needed for all tumor cells to achieve the terminal differentiation state needs to be evaluated. In contrast, prolonged treatments can result in genetic alterations leading to resistance. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5911586/ /pubmed/29542868 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1379 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Cancer Biology
Royer‐Pokora, Brigitte
Beier, Manfred
Brandt, Artur
Duhme, Constanze
Busch, Maike
de Torres, Carmen
Royer, Hans‐Dieter
Mora, Jaume
Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors
title Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors
title_full Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors
title_fullStr Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors
title_full_unstemmed Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors
title_short Chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in WT1‐mutant Wilms tumors
title_sort chemotherapy and terminal skeletal muscle differentiation in wt1‐mutant wilms tumors
topic Cancer Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5911586/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29542868
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1379
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