PreferentialMGMThypermethylation in SDH-deficient wild-type GIST

Author:

Giger Olivier TORCID,ten Hoopen Rogier,Shorthouse DavidORCID,Abdullahi Shukri,Bulusu Venkata Ramesh,Jadhav Saili,Maher Eamonn R,Casey Ruth T

Abstract

AimsWild-type gastrointestinal stromal tumours (wtGIST) are frequently caused by inherited pathogenic variants, or somatic alterations in the succinate dehydrogenase subunit genes (SDHx). Succinate dehydrogenase is a key enzyme in the citric acid cycle. SDH deficiency caused bySDHxinactivation leads to an accumulation of succinate, which inhibits DNA and histone demethylase enzymes, resulting in global hypermethylation. Epigenetic silencing of the DNA repair gene MGMT has proven utility as a positive predictor of the therapeutic efficacy of the alklyating drug temozolomide (TMZ) in tumours such as glioblastoma multiforme. The aim of this study was to examine MGMT promoter methylation status in a large cohort of GIST.MethodsMGMT methylation analysis was performed on 65 tumour samples including 47 wtGIST (33 SDH-deficient wtGIST and 11 SDH preserved wtGIST) and 21 tyrosine kinase (TK) mutant GIST.ResultsMGMTpromoter methylation was detected in 8 cases of SDH-deficient (dSDH) GIST but in none of the 14 SDH preserved wild-type GIST or 21 TK mutant GIST samples analysed. Mean MGMT methylation was significantly higher (p 0.0449) and MGMT expression significantly lower (p<0.0001) in dSDH wtGIST compared with TK mutant or SDH preserved GIST. No correlation was identified betweenSDHxsubunit gene mutations or SDHC epimutation status and mean MGMT methylation levels.ConclusionMGMT promoter hypermethylation occurs exclusively in a subset of dSDH wtGIST. Data from this study support testing of tumour MGMT promoter methylation in patients with dSDH wtGIST to identify those patients who may benefit from most from TMZ therapy.

Funder

Addenbrookes Charitable Trust

GIST Support UK

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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