Detection of Genomic Structural Variations Associated with Drug Sensitivity and Resistance in Acute Leukemia

Author:

Finlay Darren1ORCID,Murad Rabi1ORCID,Hong Karl2ORCID,Lee Joyce2ORCID,Pang Andy Wing Chun2,Lai Chi-Yu2,Clifford Benjamin2,Burian Carol3,Mason James3,Hastie Alex R.2ORCID,Yin Jun1,Vuori Kristiina1

Affiliation:

1. NCI-Designated Cancer Center, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA

2. Bionano Genomics Inc., San Diego, CA 92121, USA

3. Scripps MD Anderson, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA

Abstract

Acute leukemia is a particularly problematic collection of hematological cancers, and, while somewhat rare, the survival rate of patients is typically abysmal without bone marrow transplantation. Furthermore, traditional chemotherapies used as standard-of-care for patients cause significant side effects. Understanding the evolution of leukemia to identify novel targets and, therefore, drug treatment regimens is a significant medical need. Genomic rearrangements and other structural variations (SVs) have long been known to be causative and pathogenic in multiple types of cancer, including leukemia. These SVs may be involved in cancer initiation, progression, clonal evolution, and drug resistance, and a better understanding of SVs from individual patients may help guide therapeutic options. Here, we show the utilization of optical genome mapping (OGM) to detect known and novel SVs in the samples of patients with leukemia. Importantly, this technology provides an unprecedented level of granularity and quantitation unavailable to other current techniques and allows for the unbiased detection of novel SVs, which may be relevant to disease pathogenesis and/or drug resistance. Coupled with the chemosensitivities of these samples to FDA-approved oncology drugs, we show how an impartial integrative analysis of these diverse datasets can be used to associate the detected genomic rearrangements with multiple drug sensitivity profiles. Indeed, an insertion in the gene MUSK is shown to be associated with increased sensitivity to the clinically relevant agent Idarubicin, while partial tandem duplication events in the KMT2A gene are related to the efficacy of another frontline treatment, Cytarabine.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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