Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/8535
Title
Premalignant SOX2 overexpression in the fallopian tubes of ovarian cancer patients: Discovery and validation studies
Author(s)
Hellner, Karin | Miranda, Fabrizio | Fotso Chedom, Donatien | Herrero-Gonzalez, Sandra | Hayden, Daniel M | Tearle, Rick | Artibani, Mara | KaramiNejadRanjbar, Mohammad | Williams, Ruth | Gaitskell, Kezia | Elorbany, Samar | Xu, Ruoyan | Laios, Alex | Buiga, Petronela | Ahmed, Karim | Dhar, Sunanda | Zhang, Rebecca Yu | Campo, Leticia | Myers, Kevin A | Lozano, María | Ruiz-Miró, María | Gatius, Sónia | Mota, Alba | Moreno-Bueno, Gema | Matias-Guiu, Xavier | Benitez, Javier CNIO | Witty, Lorna | McVean, Gil | Leedham, Simon | Tomlinson, Ian | Drmanac, Radoje | Cazier, Jean-Baptiste | Klein, Robert | Dunne, Kevin | Bast, Robert C | Kennedy, Stephen H | Hassan, Bassim | Lise, Stefano | Garcia, María José | Peters, Brock A | Yau, Christopher | Sauka-Spengler, Tatjana | Ahmed, Ahmed Ashour
Date issued
2016-08-10
Citation
EBioMedicine. 2016 ;10:137-49.
Language
Inglés
Abstract
Current screening methods for ovarian cancer can only detect advanced disease. Earlier detection has proved difficult because the molecular precursors involved in the natural history of the disease are unknown. To identify early driver mutations in ovarian cancer cells, we used dense whole genome sequencing of micrometastases and microscopic residual disease collected at three time points over three years from a single patient during treatment for high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). The functional and clinical significance of the identified mutations was examined using a combination of population-based whole genome sequencing, targeted deep sequencing, multi-center analysis of protein expression, loss of function experiments in an in-vivo reporter assay and mammalian models, and gain of function experiments in primary cultured fallopian tube epithelial (FTE) cells. We identified frequent mutations involving a 40kb distal repressor region for the key stem cell differentiation gene SOX2. In the apparently normal FTE, the region was also mutated. This was associated with a profound increase in SOX2 expression (p<2(-16)), which was not found in patients without cancer (n=108). Importantly, we show that SOX2 overexpression in FTE is nearly ubiquitous in patients with HGSOCs (n=100), and common in BRCA1-BRCA2 mutation carriers (n=71) who underwent prophylactic salpingo-oophorectomy. We propose that the finding of SOX2 overexpression in FTE could be exploited to develop biomarkers for detecting disease at a premalignant stage, which would reduce mortality from this devastating disease.
Subject
MESH
Adult | Aged | Antineoplastic Agents | Biomarkers, Tumor | Cell Differentiation | Cell Line, Tumor | Drug Resistance, Neoplasm | Fallopian Tubes | Female | Genes, BRCA1 | Genes, BRCA2 | High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing | Humans | Image-Guided Biopsy | Laparoscopy | Middle Aged | Models, Biological | Mutation | Neoplasm Staging | Neoplastic Stem Cells | Ovarian Neoplasms | Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid | SOXB1 Transcription Factors | Gene Expression | Precancerous Conditions
Description
This work is funded by the Medical Research Council (H8RSRS00), Ovarian Cancer Action (HER00070), the Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, the National Institute for Health Research (HJRWAC05) and the Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre. MJG is recipient of a research contract from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III of the Ministerio Espanol de Sanidad y Consumo (Miguel Servet tipo II Program, CPII 13-00047). C.Y. acknowledges the support of an MRC New Investigator Research Grant (Ref No. MR-L001411-1) and the Wellcome Trust Core Award Grant Number 090532-Z-09-Z.
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