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EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma

Ependymoma (EPN) is a common pediatric brain tumor that is fatal in approximately 50% of cases. Posterior fossa A (PFA) EPN has the highest rate of recurrence and the worst prognosis of all EPN subtypes. At relapse, it is typically incurable even with re-resection and re-irradiation. The biology of...

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Autores principales: Norris, Gregory, Fu, Rui, Riemondy, Kent, Willard, Nicholas, Griesinger, Andrea, Amani, Vladamir, Grimaldi, Enrique, Harris, Faith, Gilani, Ahmed, Hankinson, Todd, Hesselberth, Jay, Foreman, Nicholas, Donson, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9165014/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.153
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author Norris, Gregory
Fu, Rui
Riemondy, Kent
Willard, Nicholas
Griesinger, Andrea
Amani, Vladamir
Grimaldi, Enrique
Harris, Faith
Gilani, Ahmed
Hankinson, Todd
Hesselberth, Jay
Foreman, Nicholas
Donson, Andrew
author_facet Norris, Gregory
Fu, Rui
Riemondy, Kent
Willard, Nicholas
Griesinger, Andrea
Amani, Vladamir
Grimaldi, Enrique
Harris, Faith
Gilani, Ahmed
Hankinson, Todd
Hesselberth, Jay
Foreman, Nicholas
Donson, Andrew
author_sort Norris, Gregory
collection PubMed
description Ependymoma (EPN) is a common pediatric brain tumor that is fatal in approximately 50% of cases. Posterior fossa A (PFA) EPN has the highest rate of recurrence and the worst prognosis of all EPN subtypes. At relapse, it is typically incurable even with re-resection and re-irradiation. The biology of recurrent ependymoma remains largely unknown, which hinders clinical advances. In this study, we use paired samples of primary and recurrent disease from the same patient to investigate the drivers of recurrence. DNA methylation studies reveal frequent copy number variants at recurrence that were not present at primary presentation. We report a frequent gain of chromosome 1q and loss of 6p at recurrence, which has not been previously reported and may be a driver of recurrent disease. We have previously shown that PFA EPN is comprised of 4 main neoplastic cell populations, two well-differentiated populations termed ciliated and transportive ependymal cells, a mesenchymal cell population, and an undifferentiated population. Using spatial transcriptomics (Visium) integrated with single-nuclei RNA-seq (Chromium), we discovered that a highly proliferative EPN progenitor population of epithelial lineage is significantly upregulated at recurrence which we hypothesize drives refractory disease. Accordingly, we found higher expression of EPN progenitor gene signatures in bulk RNA transcriptomes of primary tumors that later recurred compared to tumors that never recurred. Together, these findings highlight the biologic differences between primary and recurrent disease and add to our understanding of treatment resistance in childhood ependymoma.
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spelling pubmed-91650142022-06-05 EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma Norris, Gregory Fu, Rui Riemondy, Kent Willard, Nicholas Griesinger, Andrea Amani, Vladamir Grimaldi, Enrique Harris, Faith Gilani, Ahmed Hankinson, Todd Hesselberth, Jay Foreman, Nicholas Donson, Andrew Neuro Oncol Ependymoma Ependymoma (EPN) is a common pediatric brain tumor that is fatal in approximately 50% of cases. Posterior fossa A (PFA) EPN has the highest rate of recurrence and the worst prognosis of all EPN subtypes. At relapse, it is typically incurable even with re-resection and re-irradiation. The biology of recurrent ependymoma remains largely unknown, which hinders clinical advances. In this study, we use paired samples of primary and recurrent disease from the same patient to investigate the drivers of recurrence. DNA methylation studies reveal frequent copy number variants at recurrence that were not present at primary presentation. We report a frequent gain of chromosome 1q and loss of 6p at recurrence, which has not been previously reported and may be a driver of recurrent disease. We have previously shown that PFA EPN is comprised of 4 main neoplastic cell populations, two well-differentiated populations termed ciliated and transportive ependymal cells, a mesenchymal cell population, and an undifferentiated population. Using spatial transcriptomics (Visium) integrated with single-nuclei RNA-seq (Chromium), we discovered that a highly proliferative EPN progenitor population of epithelial lineage is significantly upregulated at recurrence which we hypothesize drives refractory disease. Accordingly, we found higher expression of EPN progenitor gene signatures in bulk RNA transcriptomes of primary tumors that later recurred compared to tumors that never recurred. Together, these findings highlight the biologic differences between primary and recurrent disease and add to our understanding of treatment resistance in childhood ependymoma. Oxford University Press 2022-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9165014/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.153 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Ependymoma
Norris, Gregory
Fu, Rui
Riemondy, Kent
Willard, Nicholas
Griesinger, Andrea
Amani, Vladamir
Grimaldi, Enrique
Harris, Faith
Gilani, Ahmed
Hankinson, Todd
Hesselberth, Jay
Foreman, Nicholas
Donson, Andrew
EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma
title EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma
title_full EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma
title_fullStr EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma
title_full_unstemmed EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma
title_short EPEN-16. Epithelial Progenitor Cell Abundance and Copy Number Variant Gains and Losses Impact the Biology of Recurrent Ependymoma
title_sort epen-16. epithelial progenitor cell abundance and copy number variant gains and losses impact the biology of recurrent ependymoma
topic Ependymoma
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9165014/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.153
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