Ganglioglioma with adverse clinical outcome and atypical histopathological features were defined by alterations in PTPN11/KRAS/NF1 and other RAS-/MAP-Kinase pathway genes.
Lucas HoffmannRoland CorasKatja KobowJavier A López-RiveraDennis LalCostin LeuImad M NajmPeter NürnbergJochen HermsPatrick N HarterChristian G BienThilo KalbhennMarkus MüllerTom PieperTill S HartliebManfred KudernatschHajo M HamerSebastian BrandnerKarl RoesslerIngmar BluemckeSamir JabariPublished in: Acta neuropathologica (2023)
Exome-wide sequencing studies recently described PTPN11 as a novel brain somatic epilepsy gene. In contrast, germline mutations of PTPN11 are known to cause Noonan syndrome, a multisystem disorder characterized by abnormal facial features, developmental delay, and sporadically, also brain tumors. Herein, we performed a deep phenotype-genotype analysis of a comprehensive series of ganglioglioma (GG) with brain somatic alterations of the PTPN11/KRAS/NF1 genes compared to GG with common MAP-Kinase signaling pathway alterations, i.e., BRAFV600E. Seventy-two GG were submitted to whole exome sequencing and genotyping and 84 low grade epilepsy associated tumors (LEAT) to DNA-methylation analysis. In 28 tumours, both analyses were available from the same sample. Clinical data were retrieved from hospital files including disease onset, age at surgery, brain localization, and seizure outcome. A comprehensive histopathology staining panel was available in all cases. We identified eight GG with PTPN11 alterations, copy number variant (CNV) gains of chromosome 12, and the commonality of additional CNV gains in NF1, KRAS, FGFR4 and RHEB, as well as BRAFV600E alterations. Histopathology revealed an atypical glio-neuronal phenotype with subarachnoidal tumor spread and large, pleomorphic, and multinuclear cellular features. Only three out of eight patients with GG and PTPN11/KRAS/NF1 alterations were free of disabling-seizures 2 years after surgery (38% had Engel I). This was remarkably different from our series of GG with only BRAFV600E mutations (85% had Engel I). Unsupervised cluster analysis of DNA methylation arrays separated these tumours from well-established LEAT categories. Our data point to a subgroup of GG with cellular atypia in glial and neuronal cell components, adverse postsurgical outcome, and genetically characterized by complex alterations in PTPN11 and other RAS-/MAP-Kinase and/or mTOR signaling pathways. These findings need prospective validation in clinical practice as they argue for an adaptation of the WHO grading system in developmental, glio-neuronal tumors associated with early onset focal epilepsy.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- signaling pathway
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- mitochondrial dna
- pi k akt
- wild type
- early onset
- low grade
- lps induced
- cerebral ischemia
- clinical practice
- nuclear factor
- induced apoptosis
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- late onset
- white matter
- machine learning
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- stem cells
- inflammatory response
- magnetic resonance
- cell therapy
- healthcare
- high density
- resting state
- study protocol
- clinical trial
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- spinal cord
- bone marrow
- genome wide identification
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- adverse drug
- case report
- transcription factor
- acute coronary syndrome
- protein kinase
- high grade
- artificial intelligence