Capicua (CIC) mutations in gliomas in association with MAPK activation for exposing a potential therapeutic target

Author:

Darabi Sourat1,Xiu Joanne2,Samec Timothy2ORCID,Kesari Santosh3,Carrillo Jose3,Aulakh Sonikpreet4,Walsh Kyle M.5,Sengupta Soma6,Sumrall Ashley7,Spetzler David2,Glantz Michael8,Demeure Michael J1

Affiliation:

1. Hoag Family Cancer Institute

2. Caris Life Sciences

3. Pacific Neuroscience Institute

4. West Virginia University School of Medicine

5. Duke University School of Medicine

6. University of Cincinnati College of Medicine

7. Levine Cancer Institute

8. Penn State Health Milton S Hershey Medical Center

Abstract

Abstract Gliomas are the most prevalent neurological cancer in the United States and care modalities are not able to effectively combat these aggressive malignancies. Identifying new, more effective treatments require a deep understanding of the complex genetic variations and relevant pathway associations behind these cancers. Drawing connections between gene mutations with a responsive genetic target can help drive therapy selections to enhance patient survival. We have performed extensive molecular profiling of the Capicua gene (CIC), a tumor and transcriptional suppressor gene, and its mutation prevalence in reference to MAPK activation within clinical glioma tissue. CIC mutations occur far more frequently in oligodendroglioma (52.1%) than in low-grade astrocytoma or glioblastoma. CIC-associated mutations were observed across all glioma subtypes, and MAPK-associated mutations were most prevalent in CIC wild-type tissue regardless of the glioma subtype. MAPK activation, however, was enhanced in CIC-mutated oligodendroglioma. The totality of our observations reported supports the use of CIC as a relevant genetic marker for MAPK activation. Identification of CIC mutations, or lack thereof, can assist in selecting, implementing, and developing MEK/MAPK-inhibitory trials to improve patient outcomes potentially.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference45 articles.

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