740 Biomarkers diverging between tumor mutation burden and microsatellite instability

BackgroundDNA repair is a critical process to maintain DNA integrity. It is conducted by distinct pathways of genes, many of whose alterations are thought to result in genomic instability and hypermutability, ultimately contributing to tumorigenesis. Tumor Mutation Burden (TMB) and Microsatellite In...

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Published inJournal for immunotherapy of cancer Vol. 8; no. Suppl 3; pp. A786 - A787
Main Authors Ding, Jason, Patel, Nihir
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BMJ Publishing Group LTD 01.11.2020
BMJ Publishing Group
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Abstract BackgroundDNA repair is a critical process to maintain DNA integrity. It is conducted by distinct pathways of genes, many of whose alterations are thought to result in genomic instability and hypermutability, ultimately contributing to tumorigenesis. Tumor Mutation Burden (TMB) and Microsatellite Instability (MSI) are considered as efficacy biomarkers for immunotherapy.1 2 However, there has been little characterization of the association between DNA repair genes and TMB/MSI in cancer. This study aims to further understand DNA repair genes and evaluate the contribution of their alteration to TMB and MSI.MethodsWe systematically analyzed 282 DNA repair genes involved in 20 DNA repair pathways. These genes were evaluated for mutations based on 274 sequenced colorectal tumor samples from the TCGA database. The functional impacts of these mutations were analyzed, and only damaging mutations were used for the subsequent analysis. The most frequently mutated genes were identified. The association between the damaging mutations and TMB/MSI status was calculated for each gene, and the significant genes were subject to further pathway enrichment analysis. We also compared the gene expression between TMB high and low as well as between MSI-H and MSI-L/MSS for each gene based on their RNAseq data. The potential associations with TMB/MSI high phenotypes were evaluated.Results94 genes were identified to be significantly mutated in TMB high, including all of the 26 genes that were significant in MSI-H . The genes are enriched in multiple pathways, including Fanconi anemia, Base excision repair, and Mismatch repair. At the expression level, 28 genes are significantly downregulated in TMB high samples, while 35 genes in MSI-H, suggesting that the inactivation of these genes might be mediated by epigenetic abnormalities (figure 1). 10 genes, including POLE, were identified that are significantly mutated in TMB high samples as compared to MSI-H samples (table 1). Loss of function of these genes may result in an ultra-mutated phenotype. Contradicting the notion that POLE mutation is predominantly associated with MSS tumors and are mutually exclusive with the complete loss of MMR,4–6 we found about half of POLE-mutant samples (8/16) were MSI high, five of which had MMR mutations (figure 2).Abstract 740 Figure 1Venn diagram of significant genes associated with MSI-H and TMB-high, identified using expression changes and loss of function mutations.Abstract 740 Table 1Genes significantly mutated in TMB-high compared to MSI-H.Abstract 740 Figure 2MLH1 expressed significantly lower in MSI-H samplesConclusionsThe study investigated the association of DNA repair genes with TMB and MSI. We compared genes significantly altered in TMB high and MSI-H samples and identified genes pointing to a potential mechanism that induces ultra-mutation in a subset of cancer patients with intact MMR, which can serve as potential biomarkers for immunotherapy efficacy linked with high TMB.ReferencesChan TA, Yarchoan M, Jaffee E, et al. Development of tumor mutation burden as an immunotherapy biomarker: utility for the oncology clinic. Ann Oncol 2019; 30(1):44–56.Chang L, Chang M, Chang HM, Chang F. Microsatellite Instability: A Predictive Biomarker for Cancer Immunotherapy. Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol 2018;26(2):e15–e21.Cancer Genome Atlas Network. Comprehensive molecular characterization of human colon and rectal cancer. Nature 2012;487:330–337.Albertson TM, Ogawa M, Bugni JM, et al. DNA polymerase epsilon and delta proofreading suppress discrete mutator and cancer phenotypes in mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2009;106:17101-17104.Church DN, Briggs SE, Palles C, et al. DNA polymerase epsilon and delta exonuclease domain mutations in endometrial cancer. Hum Mol Genet 2013;22:2820–2828.Valle L, Hernandez-Illan E, Bellido F, et al. New insights into POLE and POLD1 germline mutations in familial colorectal cancer and polyposis. Hum Mol Genet 2014;23:3506–3512.
AbstractList BackgroundDNA repair is a critical process to maintain DNA integrity. It is conducted by distinct pathways of genes, many of whose alterations are thought to result in genomic instability and hypermutability, ultimately contributing to tumorigenesis. Tumor Mutation Burden (TMB) and Microsatellite Instability (MSI) are considered as efficacy biomarkers for immunotherapy.1 2 However, there has been little characterization of the association between DNA repair genes and TMB/MSI in cancer. This study aims to further understand DNA repair genes and evaluate the contribution of their alteration to TMB and MSI.MethodsWe systematically analyzed 282 DNA repair genes involved in 20 DNA repair pathways. These genes were evaluated for mutations based on 274 sequenced colorectal tumor samples from the TCGA database. The functional impacts of these mutations were analyzed, and only damaging mutations were used for the subsequent analysis. The most frequently mutated genes were identified. The association between the damaging mutations and TMB/MSI status was calculated for each gene, and the significant genes were subject to further pathway enrichment analysis. We also compared the gene expression between TMB high and low as well as between MSI-H and MSI-L/MSS for each gene based on their RNAseq data. The potential associations with TMB/MSI high phenotypes were evaluated.Results94 genes were identified to be significantly mutated in TMB high, including all of the 26 genes that were significant in MSI-H . The genes are enriched in multiple pathways, including Fanconi anemia, Base excision repair, and Mismatch repair. At the expression level, 28 genes are significantly downregulated in TMB high samples, while 35 genes in MSI-H, suggesting that the inactivation of these genes might be mediated by epigenetic abnormalities (figure 1). 10 genes, including POLE, were identified that are significantly mutated in TMB high samples as compared to MSI-H samples (table 1). Loss of function of these genes may result in an ultra-mutated phenotype. Contradicting the notion that POLE mutation is predominantly associated with MSS tumors and are mutually exclusive with the complete loss of MMR,4–6 we found about half of POLE-mutant samples (8/16) were MSI high, five of which had MMR mutations (figure 2).Abstract 740 Figure 1Venn diagram of significant genes associated with MSI-H and TMB-high, identified using expression changes and loss of function mutations.Abstract 740 Table 1Genes significantly mutated in TMB-high compared to MSI-H.Abstract 740 Figure 2MLH1 expressed significantly lower in MSI-H samplesConclusionsThe study investigated the association of DNA repair genes with TMB and MSI. We compared genes significantly altered in TMB high and MSI-H samples and identified genes pointing to a potential mechanism that induces ultra-mutation in a subset of cancer patients with intact MMR, which can serve as potential biomarkers for immunotherapy efficacy linked with high TMB.ReferencesChan TA, Yarchoan M, Jaffee E, et al. Development of tumor mutation burden as an immunotherapy biomarker: utility for the oncology clinic. Ann Oncol 2019; 30(1):44–56.Chang L, Chang M, Chang HM, Chang F. Microsatellite Instability: A Predictive Biomarker for Cancer Immunotherapy. Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol 2018;26(2):e15–e21.Cancer Genome Atlas Network. Comprehensive molecular characterization of human colon and rectal cancer. Nature 2012;487:330–337.Albertson TM, Ogawa M, Bugni JM, et al. DNA polymerase epsilon and delta proofreading suppress discrete mutator and cancer phenotypes in mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2009;106:17101-17104.Church DN, Briggs SE, Palles C, et al. DNA polymerase epsilon and delta exonuclease domain mutations in endometrial cancer. Hum Mol Genet 2013;22:2820–2828.Valle L, Hernandez-Illan E, Bellido F, et al. New insights into POLE and POLD1 germline mutations in familial colorectal cancer and polyposis. Hum Mol Genet 2014;23:3506–3512.
BackgroundDNA repair is a critical process to maintain DNA integrity. It is conducted by distinct pathways of genes, many of whose alterations are thought to result in genomic instability and hypermutability, ultimately contributing to tumorigenesis. Tumor Mutation Burden (TMB) and Microsatellite Instability (MSI) are considered as efficacy biomarkers for immunotherapy.1 2 However, there has been little characterization of the association between DNA repair genes and TMB/MSI in cancer. This study aims to further understand DNA repair genes and evaluate the contribution of their alteration to TMB and MSI.MethodsWe systematically analyzed 282 DNA repair genes involved in 20 DNA repair pathways. These genes were evaluated for mutations based on 274 sequenced colorectal tumor samples from the TCGA database. The functional impacts of these mutations were analyzed, and only damaging mutations were used for the subsequent analysis. The most frequently mutated genes were identified. The association between the damaging mutations and TMB/MSI status was calculated for each gene, and the significant genes were subject to further pathway enrichment analysis. We also compared the gene expression between TMB high and low as well as between MSI-H and MSI-L/MSS for each gene based on their RNAseq data. The potential associations with TMB/MSI high phenotypes were evaluated.Results94 genes were identified to be significantly mutated in TMB high, including all of the 26 genes that were significant in MSI-H . The genes are enriched in multiple pathways, including Fanconi anemia, Base excision repair, and Mismatch repair. At the expression level, 28 genes are significantly downregulated in TMB high samples, while 35 genes in MSI-H, suggesting that the inactivation of these genes might be mediated by epigenetic abnormalities (figure 1). 10 genes, including POLE, were identified that are significantly mutated in TMB high samples as compared to MSI-H samples (table 1). Loss of function of these genes may result in an ultra-mutated phenotype. Contradicting the notion that POLE mutation is predominantly associated with MSS tumors and are mutually exclusive with the complete loss of MMR,4–6 we found about half of POLE-mutant samples (8/16) were MSI high, five of which had MMR mutations (figure 2).Abstract 740 Figure 1Venn diagram of significant genes associated with MSI-H and TMB-high, identified using expression changes and loss of function mutations.[Figure omitted. See PDF]Abstract 740 Table 1Genes significantly mutated in TMB-high compared to MSI-H.Abstract 740 Figure 2MLH1 expressed significantly lower in MSI-H samples[Figure omitted. See PDF]ConclusionsThe study investigated the association of DNA repair genes with TMB and MSI. We compared genes significantly altered in TMB high and MSI-H samples and identified genes pointing to a potential mechanism that induces ultra-mutation in a subset of cancer patients with intact MMR, which can serve as potential biomarkers for immunotherapy efficacy linked with high TMB.ReferencesChan TA, Yarchoan M, Jaffee E, et al. Development of tumor mutation burden as an immunotherapy biomarker: utility for the oncology clinic. Ann Oncol 2019; 30(1):44–56.Chang L, Chang M, Chang HM, Chang F. Microsatellite Instability: A Predictive Biomarker for Cancer Immunotherapy. Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol 2018;26(2):e15–e21.Cancer Genome Atlas Network. Comprehensive molecular characterization of human colon and rectal cancer. Nature 2012;487:330–337.Albertson TM, Ogawa M, Bugni JM, et al. DNA polymerase epsilon and delta proofreading suppress discrete mutator and cancer phenotypes in mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2009;106:17101-17104.Church DN, Briggs SE, Palles C, et al. DNA polymerase epsilon and delta exonuclease domain mutations in endometrial cancer. Hum Mol Genet 2013;22:2820–2828.Valle L, Hernandez-Illan E, Bellido F, et al. New insights into POLE and POLD1 germline mutations in familial colorectal cancer and polyposis. Hum Mol Genet 2014;23:3506–3512.
Author Ding, Jason
Patel, Nihir
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Snippet BackgroundDNA repair is a critical process to maintain DNA integrity. It is conducted by distinct pathways of genes, many of whose alterations are thought to...
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SubjectTerms Biomarkers
Cancer
Colorectal cancer
DNA polymerase
DNA repair
Endometrial cancer
Gene expression
Immunotherapy
Mutation
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Title 740 Biomarkers diverging between tumor mutation burden and microsatellite instability
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