PiggyBac mutagenesis and exome sequencing identify genetic driver landscapes and potential therapeutic targets of EGFR -mutant gliomas
Authors
de la Rosa, Jorge
Choi, Yoon Ha
Strong, Alexander
Ponstingl, Hannes
Vijayabaskar, M. S.
Lee, Jusung
Lee, Eunmin
Richard-Londt, Angela
Friedrich, Mathias
Furlanetto, Federica
Fuente, Rocio
Banerjee, Ruby
Yang, Fengtang
Law, Frances
Watts, Colin
Rad, Roland
Vassiliou, George
Kim, Jong Kyoung
Santarius, Thomas
Brandner, Sebastian
Bradley, Allan
Publication Date
2020-07-30Journal Title
Genome Biology
Publisher
BioMed Central
Volume
21
Issue
1
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Noorani, I., de la Rosa, J., Choi, Y. H., Strong, A., Ponstingl, H., Vijayabaskar, M. S., Lee, J., et al. (2020). PiggyBac mutagenesis and exome sequencing identify genetic driver landscapes and potential therapeutic targets of EGFR -mutant gliomas. Genome Biology, 21 (1)https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-020-02092-2
Description
Funder: Wellcome Trust; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100004440
Abstract
Abstract: Background: Glioma is the most common intrinsic brain tumor and also occurs in the spinal cord. Activating EGFR mutations are common in IDH1 wild-type gliomas. However, the cooperative partners of EGFR driving gliomagenesis remain poorly understood. Results: We explore EGFR-mutant glioma evolution in conditional mutant mice by whole-exome sequencing, transposon mutagenesis forward genetic screening, and transcriptomics. We show mutant EGFR is sufficient to initiate gliomagenesis in vivo, both in the brain and spinal cord. We identify significantly recurrent somatic alterations in these gliomas including mutant EGFR amplifications and Sub1, Trp53, and Tead2 loss-of-function mutations. Comprehensive functional characterization of 96 gliomas by genome-wide piggyBac insertional mutagenesis in vivo identifies 281 known and novel EGFR-cooperating driver genes, including Cdkn2a, Nf1, Spred1, and Nav3. Transcriptomics confirms transposon-mediated effects on expression of these genes. We validate the clinical relevance of new putative tumor suppressors by showing these are frequently altered in patients’ gliomas, with prognostic implications. We discover shared and distinct driver mutations in brain and spinal gliomas and confirm in vivo differential tumor suppressive effects of Pten between these tumors. Functional validation with CRISPR-Cas9-induced mutations in novel genes Tead2, Spred1, and Nav3 demonstrates heightened EGFRvIII-glioma cell proliferation. Chemogenomic analysis of mutated glioma genes reveals potential drug targets, with several investigational drugs showing efficacy in vitro. Conclusion: Our work elucidates functional driver landscapes of EGFR-mutant gliomas, uncovering potential therapeutic strategies, and provides new tools for functional interrogation of gliomagenesis.
Keywords
Research, Cancer Evolution and Metastasis
Identifiers
s13059-020-02092-2, 2092
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-020-02092-2
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/308844
Rights
Licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/