Intraclonal heterogeneity and distinct molecular mechanisms characterize the development of t(4;14) and t(11;14) myeloma

Author:

Walker Brian A.1,Wardell Christopher P.1,Melchor Lorenzo1,Hulkki Sanna1,Potter Nicola E.1,Johnson David C.1,Fenwick Kerry2,Kozarewa Iwanka2,Gonzalez David1,Lord Christopher J.2,Ashworth Alan2,Davies Faith E.1,Morgan Gareth J.1

Affiliation:

1. Haemato-Oncology Research Unit, Division of Molecular Pathology and

2. Breakthrough Breast Cancer Centre, Division of Breast Cancer Research, The Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract We have used whole exome sequencing to compare a group of presentation t(4;14) with t(11;14) cases of myeloma to define the mutational landscape. Each case was characterized by a median of 24.5 exonic nonsynonymous single-nucleotide variations, and there was a consistently higher number of mutations in the t(4;14) group, but this number did not reach statistical significance. We show that the transition and transversion rates in the 2 subgroups are similar, suggesting that there was no specific mechanism leading to mutation differentiating the 2 groups. Only 3% of mutations were seen in both groups, and recurrently mutated genes include NRAS, KRAS, BRAF, and DIS3 as well as DNAH5, a member of the axonemal dynein family. The pattern of mutation in each group was distinct, with the t(4;14) group being characterized by deregulation of chromatin organization, actin filament, and microfilament movement. Recurrent RAS pathway mutations identified subclonal heterogeneity at a mutational level in both groups, with mutations being present as either dominant or minor subclones. The presence of subclonal diversity was confirmed at a single-cell level using other tumor-acquired mutations. These results are consistent with a distinct molecular pathogenesis underlying each subgroup and have important impacts on targeted treatment strategies. The Medical Research Council Myeloma IX trial is registered under ISRCTN68454111.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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