The genomic landscape of two Burkitt lymphoma cases and derived cell lines: comparison between primary and relapse samples.
Claudia M WeverDominique GeoffrionBruno M GrandeStephen YuMiguel AlcaideMaryse LemaireYasser RiazalhosseiniJosée HébertChristina GavinoDonald C VinhTina Petrogiannis-HaliotisSvetlana DmitrienkoKoren K MannRyan D MorinNathalie A JohnsonPublished in: Leukemia & lymphoma (2018)
Relapse occurs in 10-40% of Burkitt lymphoma (BL) patients that have completed intensive chemotherapy regimens and is typically fatal. While treatment-naive BL has been characterized, the genomic landscape of BL at the time of relapse (rBL) has never been reported. Here, we present a genomic characterization of two rBL patients. The diagnostic samples had mutations common in BL, including MYC and CCND3. Additional mutations were detected at relapse, affecting important pathways such as NFκB (IKBKB) and MEK/ERK (NRAS) signaling, glutamine metabolism (SIRT4), and RNA processing (ZFP36L2). Genes implicated in drug resistance were also mutated at relapse (TP53, BAX, ALDH3A1, APAF1, FANCI). This concurrent genomic profiling of samples obtained at diagnosis and relapse has revealed mutations not previously reported in this disease. The patient-derived cell lines will be made available and, along with their detailed genetics, will be a valuable resource to examine the role of specific mutations in therapeutic resistance.