Proteogenomics refines the molecular classification of chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Author:

Herbst Sophie A.ORCID,Vesterlund MattiasORCID,Helmboldt Alexander J.ORCID,Jafari RozbehORCID,Siavelis Ioannis,Stahl MatthiasORCID,Schitter Eva C.,Liebers Nora,Brinkmann Berit J.ORCID,Czernilofsky FelixORCID,Roider TobiasORCID,Bruch Peter-MartinORCID,Iskar MuratORCID,Kittai Adam,Huang Ying,Lu JunyanORCID,Richter Sarah,Mermelekas Georgios,Umer Husen Muhammad,Knoll Mareike,Kolb Carolin,Lenze Angela,Cao Xiaofang,Österholm Cecilia,Wahnschaffe Linus,Herling Carmen,Scheinost Sebastian,Ganzinger MatthiasORCID,Mansouri Larry,Kriegsmann Katharina,Kriegsmann Mark,Anders SimonORCID,Zapatka MarcORCID,Del Poeta Giovanni,Zucchetto Antonella,Bomben RiccardoORCID,Gattei ValterORCID,Dreger Peter,Woyach JenniferORCID,Herling Marco,Müller-Tidow CarstenORCID,Rosenquist RichardORCID,Stilgenbauer Stephan,Zenz ThorstenORCID,Huber WolfgangORCID,Tausch Eugen,Lehtiö JanneORCID,Dietrich SaschaORCID

Abstract

AbstractCancer heterogeneity at the proteome level may explain differences in therapy response and prognosis beyond the currently established genomic and transcriptomic-based diagnostics. The relevance of proteomics for disease classifications remains to be established in clinically heterogeneous cancer entities such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Here, we characterize the proteome and transcriptome alongside genetic and ex-vivo drug response profiling in a clinically annotated CLL discovery cohort (n = 68). Unsupervised clustering of the proteome data reveals six subgroups. Five of these proteomic groups are associated with genetic features, while one group is only detectable at the proteome level. This new group is characterized by accelerated disease progression, high spliceosomal protein abundances associated with aberrant splicing, and low B cell receptor signaling protein abundances (ASB-CLL). Classifiers developed to identify ASB-CLL based on its characteristic proteome or splicing signature in two independent cohorts (n = 165, n = 169) confirm that ASB-CLL comprises about 20% of CLL patients. The inferior overall survival in ASB-CLL is also independent of both TP53- and IGHV mutation status. Our multi-omics analysis refines the classification of CLL and highlights the potential of proteomics to improve cancer patient stratification beyond genetic and transcriptomic profiling.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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