DNA methylation-based classifier and gene expression signatures detect BRCAness in osteosarcoma

Author:

Barenboim MaximORCID,Kovac Michal,Ameline BaptisteORCID,Jones David T. W.,Witt Olaf,Bielack Stefan,Burdach Stefan,Baumhoer DanielORCID,Nathrath Michaela

Abstract

Although osteosarcoma (OS) is a rare cancer, it is the most common primary malignant bone tumor in children and adolescents. BRCAness is a phenotypical trait in tumors with a defect in homologous recombination repair, resembling tumors with inactivation of BRCA1/2, rendering these tumors sensitive to poly (ADP)-ribose polymerase inhibitors (PARPi). Recently, OS was shown to exhibit molecular features of BRCAness. Our goal was to develop a method complementing existing genomic methods to aid clinical decision making on administering PARPi in OS patients. OS samples with DNA-methylation data were divided to BRCAness-positive and negative groups based on the degree of their genomic instability (n = 41). Methylation probes were ranked according to decreasing variance difference between two groups. The top 2000 probes were selected for training and cross-validation of the random forest algorithm. Two-thirds of available OS RNA-Seq samples (n = 17) from the top and bottom of the sample list ranked according to genome instability score were subjected to differential expression and, subsequently, to gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA). The combined accuracy of trained random forest was 85% and the average area under the ROC curve (AUC) was 0.95. There were 449 upregulated and 1,079 downregulated genes in the BRCAness-positive group (fdr < 0.05). GSEA of upregulated genes detected enrichment of DNA replication and mismatch repair and homologous recombination signatures (FWER < 0.05). Validation of the BRCAness classifier with an independent OS set (n = 20) collected later in the course of study showed AUC of 0.87 with an accuracy of 90%. GSEA signatures computed for this test set were matching the ones observed in the training set enrichment analysis. In conclusion, we developed a new classifier based on DNA-methylation patterns that detects BRCAness in OS samples with high accuracy. GSEA identified genome instability signatures. Machine-learning and gene expression approaches add new epigenomic and transcriptomic aspects to already established genomic methods for evaluation of BRCAness in osteosarcoma and can be extended to cancers characterized by genome instability.

Funder

Doris Stiftung

Cura Placida Stiftung

Helga und Heinrich Holzhauer Stiftung

Swiss National Science Foundation

The Foundation of the Basel Bone Tumor Reference Center

Gertrude von Meissner-Stiftung

Stiftung für krebskranke Kinder, Regio Basiliensis

Slovak Research and Development Agency APVV

Slovak Grant Agency VEGA

Deutsche Krebshilfe

Deutsche Kinderkrebsstiftung

German Cancer Consortium

German Cancer Research Center

Schue family

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Computational Theory and Mathematics,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology,Modelling and Simulation,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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