RASGRF2 gene fusions identified in a variety of melanocytic lesions with distinct morphological features.
Aurélie HoulierDaniel PissalouxFranck TirodeNoémie Lopez RamirezMaud PlaschkaJulie CaramelIngrid MasseArnaud de la FouchardierePublished in: Pigment cell & melanoma research (2021)
The WHO classification identifies nine classes of melanocytic proliferations according to location, UV exposure, histological, and genetic features. Only a minority of lesions remain unclassified. We describe five cases that harbored either an ERBIN-RASGRF2 or an ATP2B4-RASGRF2 in-frame fusion transcript. These lesions were collected from different studies, unified only by the lack of identifiable known mutations, with a highly variable phenotype. One case was a large abdominal congenital nevus, three were slowly growing pigmented nodules, and the last was an ulcerated nodule arising on the site of a preexisting small nevus, known since childhood. The latter was diagnosed as a 4 mm thick melanoma with loss of BAP1 expression. The four other cases were compound, melanocytic proliferations with an unusual deep pattern of small dense nests of bland melanocytes encased in a fibrous background. The RASGRF2 fusion was confirmed by a break-apart FISH technique. Array CGH performed in three cases found non-recurrent secondary copy number alterations. Follow-up was uneventful. In silico analysis identified a single RASGRF2 fusion in the TCGA pan-cancer database, whereas RASGRF2 variants were stochastically distributed in all cancer subtypes.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- genome wide
- mitochondrial dna
- papillary thyroid
- dna methylation
- childhood cancer
- squamous cell
- machine learning
- poor prognosis
- squamous cell carcinoma
- emergency department
- deep learning
- lymph node metastasis
- young adults
- gene expression
- high throughput
- mass spectrometry
- rna seq
- binding protein
- early life
- single cell
- electronic health record