Author:
Satoh Chisei,Yoshiura Koh-ichiro,Mishima Hiroyuki,Yoshida Haruo,Takahashi Haruo,Kumai Yoshihiko
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Chronic inflammation causes bone destruction in middle ear cholesteatomas (MECs). However, the causes of their neoplastic features remain unknown. The present study demonstrated for the first time that neoplastic features of MEC are based on proto-oncogene mutations.
Results
DNA was extracted from MEC and blood samples of five patients to detect somatic mutations using depth-depth exome sequencing. Exons with somatic variants were analyzed using an additional 17 MEC/blood test pairs. Variants detected in MECs but not in blood were considered pathogenic variant candidates. We analyzed the correlation between proto-oncogene (NOTCH1 and MYC) variants and the presence of bone destruction and granulation tissue formation. MYC and NOTCH1 variants were detected in two and five of the 22 samples, respectively. Two of the NOTCH1 variants were located in its specific functional domain, one was truncating and the other was a splice donor site variant. Mutations of the two genes in attic cholesteatomas (n = 14) were significantly related with bone destruction (p = 0.0148) but not with granulation tissue formation (p = 0.399).
Conclusions
This is the first study to demonstrate a relationship between neoplastic features of MEC and proto-oncogene mutations.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics