- Main
Long read sequencing identifies complex structural variant landscape and recurrent TERT rearrangements in mucoepidermoid carcinoma.
- Gensterblum-Miller, Elizabeth;
- Bhangale, Apurva;
- Majid, Dana;
- Pienkowski, Victor;
- Rydzanicz, Malgorzata;
- Janiszewska, Joanna;
- Kostrzewska-Poczekaj, Magdalena;
- Chang, Clifford;
- Brummel, Collin;
- Michmerhuizen, Nicole;
- Wang, Jiayu;
- Sandford, Erin;
- Tewari, Muneesh;
- Wierzbicka, Malgorzata;
- Birkeland, Andrew;
- McHugh, Jonathan;
- Spector, Matthew;
- Giefing, Maciej;
- Jarmuz-Szymczak, Malgorzata;
- Heft Neal, Molly;
- Brenner, J
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oraloncology.2024.107108Abstract
Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma (MEC) is a common salivary malignant neoplasm. Approximately 60 % of MECs harbor translocations between CRTC1 or CRTC3 and MAML2, which are thought to drive disease pathogenesis. However, the precise structural mechanism driving this rearrangement remains uncharacterized. Here, we performed multi-omic and long read genomic sequencing, discovering a chain of alterations that created the CRTC1::MAML2 fusion, but also an unexpected MAML2 to MYBL1 rearrangement, suggesting that MYBL1 may play a larger role in salivary gland cancers than previously recognized. Furthermore, we discovered and validated recurrent TERT rearrangements and amplifications in MEC models. 5/5 MEC cell lines and 36/39 (92 %) primary MEC tumors harbored a TERT rearrangement or copy number amplification. Custom sequencing of the TERT locus confirmed translocation breakpoints in 13/33 (39 %) MECs, while exome sequencing confirmed frequent TERT amplifications. Critically, TERT knockdown in NCI-H292, a cell line with TERT promoter rearrangement, reduced clonogenic cell survival, supporting a critical role of this gene in MEC tumorigenesis. Overall, our data suggest that complex chromothripsis rearrangement mechanisms drive the formation of structural variation in CRTC1::MAML2 fusion positive and negative tumors and reveal highly recurrent structural variation driving TERT rearrangement in MEC.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-