Comprehensive molecular characterization of pediatric radiation-induced high-grade glioma

  • John DeSisto (Shared first author)
  • John T Lucas Jr (Shared first author)
  • Ke Xu
  • Andrew Donson
  • Tong Lin
  • Bridget Sanford
  • Gang Wu
  • Quynh T Tran
  • Dale Hedges
  • Chih-Yang Hsu
  • Gregory T Armstrong
  • Michael Arnold
  • Smita Bhatia
  • Patrick Flannery
  • Rakeb Lemma
  • Lakotah Hardie
  • Ulrich Schüller
  • Sujatha Venkataraman
  • Lindsey M Hoffman
  • Kathleen Dorris
  • Jean M Mulcahy Levy
  • Todd C Hankinson
  • Michael Handler
  • Arthur K Liu
  • Nicholas Foreman
  • Rajeev Vibhakar
  • Kenneth Jones
  • Sariah Allen
  • Jinghui Zhang
  • Suzanne J Baker
  • Thomas E Merchant
  • Brent A Orr
  • Adam L Green

Abstract

Radiation-induced high-grade gliomas (RIGs) are an incurable late complication of cranial radiation therapy. We performed DNA methylation profiling, RNA-seq, and DNA sequencing on 32 RIG tumors and an in vitro drug screen in two RIG cell lines. We report that based on DNA methylation, RIGs cluster primarily with the pediatric receptor tyrosine kinase I high-grade glioma subtype. Common copy-number alterations include Chromosome (Ch.) 1p loss/1q gain, and Ch. 13q and Ch. 14q loss; focal alterations include PDGFRA and CDK4 gain and CDKN2A and BCOR loss. Transcriptomically, RIGs comprise a stem-like subgroup with lesser mutation burden and Ch. 1p loss and a pro-inflammatory subgroup with greater mutation burden and depleted DNA repair gene expression. Chromothripsis in several RIG samples is associated with extrachromosomal circular DNA-mediated amplification of PDGFRA and CDK4. Drug screening suggests microtubule inhibitors/stabilizers, DNA-damaging agents, MEK inhibition, and, in the inflammatory subgroup, proteasome inhibitors, as potentially effective therapies.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number5531
ISSN2041-1723
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20.09.2021
PubMed 34545084