scholarly journals The Mutational Landscape in Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Deciphered by Whole Genome Sequencing

2014 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Mårten Lindqvist ◽  
Jessica Nordlund ◽  
Diana Ekman ◽  
Anna Johansson ◽  
Behrooz Torabi Moghadam ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Nordlund ◽  
Yanara Marincevic-Zuniga ◽  
Lucia Cavelier ◽  
Amanda Raine ◽  
Tom Martin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTStructural chromosomal rearrangements that may lead to in-frame gene-fusions represent a leading source of information for diagnosis, risk stratification, and prognosis in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, short-read whole genome sequencing (WGS) technologies struggle to accurately identify and phase such large-scale chromosomal aberrations in cancer genomes. We therefore evaluated linked-read WGS for detection of chromosomal rearrangements in an ALL cell line (REH) and primary samples of varying DNA quality from 12 patients diagnosed with ALL. We assessed the effect of input DNA quality on phased haplotype block size and the detectability of copy number aberrations (CNAs) and structural variants (SVs). Biobanked DNA isolated by standard column-based extraction methods was sufficient to detect chromosomal rearrangements even at low 10x sequencing coverage. Linked-read WGS enabled precise, allele-specific, digital karyotyping at a base-pair resolution for a wide range of structural variants including complex rearrangements and aneuploidy assessment. With use of haplotype information from the linked-reads, we also identified additional structural variants, such as a compound heterozygous deletion of ERG in a patient with the DUX4-IGH fusion gene. Thus, linked-read WGS allows detection of important pathogenic variants in ALL genomes at a resolution beyond that of traditional karyotyping or short-read WGS.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 68-68
Author(s):  
Jinghui Zhang ◽  
Li Ding ◽  
Linda Holmfeldt ◽  
Gang Wu ◽  
Susan L. Heatley ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 68 Early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ETP ALL) is characterized by an immature T-lineage immunophenotype (cCD3+, CD1a-, CD8- and CD5dim) aberrant expression of myeloid and stem cell markers, a distinct gene expression profile and very poor outcome. The underlying genetic basis of this form of leukemia is unknown. Here we report results of whole genome sequencing (WGS) of tumor and normal DNA from 12 children with ETP ALL. Genomes were sequenced to 30-fold haploid coverage using the Illumina GAIIx platform, and all putative somatic sequence and structural variants were validated. The frequency of mutations in 43 genes was assessed in a recurrence cohort of 52 ETP and 42 non-ETP T-ALL samples from patients enrolled in St Jude, Children's Oncology Group and AEIOP trials. Transcriptomic resequencing was performed for two WGS cases, and whole exome sequencing for three ETP ALL cases in the recurrence cohort. We identified 44 interchromosomal translocations (mean 4 per patient, range 0–12), 32 intrachromosomal translocations (mean 3, 0–7), 53 deletions (mean 4, 0–10) and 16 insertions (mean 1, 0–5). Three cases exhibited a pattern of complex rearrangements suggestive of a single cellular catastrophe (“chromothripsis”), two of which had mutations targeting mismatch and DNA repair (MLH3 and DCLRE1C). While no single chromosomal alteration was present in all cases, 10 of 12 ETP ALLs harbored chromosomal rearrangements, several of which involved complex multichromosomal translocations and resulted in the expression of chimeric in-frame novel fusion genes disrupting hematopoietic regulators, including ETV6-INO80D, NAP1L1-MLLT10, RUNX1-EVX1 and NUP214-SQSTM1, each occurring in a single case. An additional ETP case with the ETV6-INO80D fusion was identified in the recurrence cohort. Additionally, 51% of structural variants had breakpoints in genes, including those with roles in hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis, and genes also targeted by mutation in other cases (MLH3, SUZ12, RUNX1). We identified a high frequency of activating mutations in genes regulating cytokine receptor and Ras signalling in ETP ALL (67.2% of ETP compared to 19% of non-ETP T-ALL) including NRAS (17%), FLT3 (14%), JAK3 (9%), SH2B3 (or LNK; 9%), IL7R (8%), JAK1 (8%), KRAS (3%), and BRAF (2%). Seven cases (5 ETP, 2 non-ETP) harbored in frame insertion mutations in the transmembrane domain of IL7R, which were transforming when expressed in the murine cell lines, and resulted in enhanced colony formation when expressed in primary murine hematopoietic cells. The IL7R mutations resulted in constitutive Jak-Stat activation in these cell lines and primary leukemic cells expressing these mutations. Fifty-eight percent of ETP cases (compared to 17% of non-ETP cases) harbored mutations known or predicted to disrupt hematopoietic and lymphoid development, including ETV6 (33%), RUNX1 (16%), IKZF1 (14%), GATA3 (10%), EP300 (5%) and GATA2 (2%). GATA3 regulates early T cell development, and mutations in this gene were observed exclusively in ETP ALL. The mutations were commonly biallelic, and were clustered at R276, a residue critical for binding of GATA3 to DNA. Strikingly, mutations disrupting chromatin modifying genes were also highly enriched in ETP ALL. Genes encoding the the polycomb repressor complex 2 (EZH2, SUZ12 and EED), that mediates histone 3 lysine 27 (H3K27) trimethylation were deleted or mutated in 42% of ETP ALL compared to 12% of non-ETP T-ALL. In addition, alterations of the H3K36 trimethylase SETD2 were observed in 5 ETP cases, but not in non-ETP ALL. We also identified recurrent mutations in genes that have not previously been implicated in hematopoietic malignancies including RELN, DNM2, ECT2L, HNRNPA1 and HNRNPR. Using gene set enrichment analysis we demonstrate that the gene expression profile of ETP ALL shares features not only with normal human hematopoietic stem cells, but also with leukemic initiating cells (LIC) purified from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). These results indicate that mutations that drive proliferation, impair differentiation and disrupt histone modification cooperate to induce an aggressive leukemia with an aberrant immature phenotype. The similarity of the gene expression pattern with that observed in the LIC of AML raises the possibility that myeloid-directed therapies might improve the outcome of ETP ALL. Disclosures: Evans: St. Jude Children's research Hospital: Employment, Patents & Royalties; NIH & NCI: Research Funding; Aldagen: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 7028-7028
Author(s):  
Jesus Gutierrez-Abril ◽  
Daniel Leongamornlert ◽  
Yangyu Zhou ◽  
SooWah Lee ◽  
Max Levine ◽  
...  

7028 Background: Hematological neoplasms are often characterized by acute onset and rapid disease progression. Cytogenetics, FISH, SNP arrays, targeted DNA and RNA sequencing are performed to inform diagnosis, risk stratification and guide treatment decisions. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) offers the opportunity to comprehensively characterize all putative biomarkers in a single assay. However, a limitation in current WGS implementation is the requirement for a germline sample, as sources of control tissue are frequently contaminated with leukemic cells resulting in false negative calls. Methods: To evaluate the clinical utility and feasibility of WGS in the diagnostic work up of leukemias, we analyzed 57 B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) from the UKALL14 trial (NCT01085617) with no informative biomarkers at diagnosis. WGS analysis was performed on the leukemic sample and a matching control sample (with minimal residual disease level of <1%). Using this dataset, we trained the development of an unmatched (uWGS) analytical workflow (Isabl) for a tumor only WGS study. This workflow was validated across 20 hematologic neoplasms (12 B-ALL, 6 AML and 2 T-ALL). Results: Among the 57 cases, 5 failed QC owing to low tumor content (<25%). Of the remaining 52, putative biomarkers of clinical relevance were identified by WGS in 69% (36/52). These included delineation of aberrant karyotypes where conventional chromosome banding failed (4/52), the detection of newly described fusion genes (such as IGH-DUX4 and EP300-ZNF384 in 21/52) and recurrent gene mutations (i.e. PAX5 P80R, ZEB2 H1038R in 11/52). uWGS workflow in our training dataset captured 86% of biomarkers identified in the matched analysis (3/3 ploidy, 21/22 fusion and 7/11 coding). Concordance between the matched and uWGS workflow for arm-level and focal copy number alterations (CNAs), structural variants (SVs) and annotated hotspot mutations were 94%, 84%, 83% and 100% respectively. Independent validation of the uWGS workflow across 20 myeloid and lymphoid neoplasms, recapitulated all clinically reported biomarkers (14/15 CNAs, 16/16 SVs) as well as captured two novel findings not previously detected in two B-ALL patients, to include a focal deletion in BTG1 and the fusion gene P2RY8-CRLF2, as well as a NOTCH1 translocation in T-ALL. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that comprehensive WGS allows for the detection of the same biomarkers as a range of clinical assays using a single test, as well as the opportunity to discover novel clinical and research findings to support future correlative research and biomarker development. Additionally, we developed and validated an uWGS workflow that allows WGS analysis of hematopoietic neoplasms at diagnosis, enabling detection and reporting of clinically relevant biomarkers.


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