학술논문

Epigenomic alterations define lethal CIMP-positive ependymomas of infancy
Document Type
article
Source
Nature. 506(7489)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Genetics
Pediatric
Human Genome
Rare Diseases
Animals
Brain Neoplasms
CpG Islands
DNA Methylation
Embryonic Stem Cells
Ependymoma
Epigenesis
Genetic
Epigenomics
Female
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Gene Silencing
Histones
Humans
Infant
Mice
Mice
Inbred NOD
Mice
SCID
Mutation
Phenotype
Polycomb Repressive Complex 2
Prognosis
Rhombencephalon
Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
Ependymomas are common childhood brain tumours that occur throughout the nervous system, but are most common in the paediatric hindbrain. Current standard therapy comprises surgery and radiation, but not cytotoxic chemotherapy as it does not further increase survival. Whole-genome and whole-exome sequencing of 47 hindbrain ependymomas reveals an extremely low mutation rate, and zero significant recurrent somatic single nucleotide variants. Although devoid of recurrent single nucleotide variants and focal copy number aberrations, poor-prognosis hindbrain ependymomas exhibit a CpG island methylator phenotype. Transcriptional silencing driven by CpG methylation converges exclusively on targets of the Polycomb repressive complex 2 which represses expression of differentiation genes through trimethylation of H3K27. CpG island methylator phenotype-positive hindbrain ependymomas are responsive to clinical drugs that target either DNA or H3K27 methylation both in vitro and in vivo. We conclude that epigenetic modifiers are the first rational therapeutic candidates for this deadly malignancy, which is epigenetically deregulated but genetically bland.