Molecular and functional profiling identifies therapeutically targetable vulnerabilities in plasmablastic lymphoma

Author:

Frontzek FabianORCID,Staiger Annette M.ORCID,Zapukhlyak Myroslav,Xu Wendan,Bonzheim Irina,Borgmann Vanessa,Sander Philip,Baptista Maria JoaoORCID,Heming Jan-Niklas,Berning Philipp,Wullenkord Ramona,Erdmann Tabea,Lutz MathiasORCID,Veratti Pia,Ehrenfeld Sophia,Wienand KirstyORCID,Horn Heike,Goodlad John R.,Wilson Matthew R.ORCID,Anagnostopoulos Ioannis,Lamping Mario,Gonzalez-Barca EvaORCID,Climent Fina,Salar AntonioORCID,Castellvi JosepORCID,Abrisqueta Pau,Menarguez Javier,Aldamiz Teresa,Richter JuliaORCID,Klapper WolframORCID,Tzankov AlexandarORCID,Dirnhofer Stefan,Rosenwald Andreas,Mate José Luis,Tapia Gustavo,Lenz Peter,Miething CorneliusORCID,Hartmann WolfgangORCID,Chapuy Björn,Fend FalkoORCID,Ott German,Navarro José-TomasORCID,Grau Michael,Lenz GeorgORCID

Abstract

AbstractPlasmablastic lymphoma (PBL) represents a rare and aggressive lymphoma subtype frequently associated with immunosuppression. Clinically, patients with PBL are characterized by poor outcome. The current understanding of the molecular pathogenesis is limited. A hallmark of PBL represents its plasmacytic differentiation with loss of B-cell markers and, in 60% of cases, its association with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Roughly 50% of PBLs harbor a MYC translocation. Here, we provide a comprehensive integrated genomic analysis using whole exome sequencing (WES) and genome-wide copy number determination in a large cohort of 96 primary PBL samples. We identify alterations activating the RAS-RAF, JAK-STAT, and NOTCH pathways as well as frequent high-level amplifications in MCL1 and IRF4. The functional impact of these alterations is assessed using an unbiased shRNA screen in a PBL model. These analyses identify the IRF4 and JAK-STAT pathways as promising molecular targets to improve outcome of PBL patients.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

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

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