Recurrent CDKN1B (p27) mutations in hairy cell leukemia

Sascha Dietrich(German Cancer Research Center), Jennifer Hüllein(German Cancer Research Center), Stanley Chun-Wei Lee(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Barbara Hutter(German Cancer Research Center), David González de Castro(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Sandrine Jayne(University of Leicester), Martin J.S. Dyer(University of Leicester), Małgorzata Oleś(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Monica Else(Institute of Cancer Research), Xiyang Liu(German Cancer Research Center), Mikołaj Słabicki(German Cancer Research Center), Bian Wu(German Cancer Research Center), Xavier Troussard(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Caen Normandie), Jan Dürig(Essen University Hospital), Mindaugas Andrulis(Heidelberg University), Claire Dearden(Royal Marsden Hospital), Christof von Kalle(German Cancer Research Center), Martin Granzow(Heidelberg University), Anna Jauch(Heidelberg University), Stefan Fröhling(German Cancer Research Center), Wolfgang Huber(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Manja Meggendorfer(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Torsten Haferlach(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Anthony D. Ho(Heidelberg University), Daniela Richter(German Cancer Research Center), Benedikt Brors(German Cancer Research Center), Hanno Glimm(German Cancer Research Center), Estella Matutes(Royal Marsden Hospital), Omar Abdel Wahab(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Thorsten Zenz(German Cancer Research Center)
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Abstract

Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is marked by near 100% mutational frequency of BRAFV600E mutations. Recurrent cooperating genetic events that may contribute to HCL pathogenesis or affect the clinical course of HCL are currently not described. Therefore, we performed whole exome sequencing to explore the mutational landscape of purine analog refractory HCL. In addition to the disease-defining BRAFV600E mutations, we identified mutations in EZH2, ARID1A, and recurrent inactivating mutations of the cell cycle inhibitor CDKN1B (p27). Targeted deep sequencing of CDKN1B in a larger cohort of HCL patients identify deleterious CDKN1B mutations in 16% of patients with HCL (n = 13 of 81). In 11 of 13 patients the CDKN1B mutation was clonal, implying an early role of CDKN1B mutations in the pathogenesis of HCL. CDKN1B mutations were not found to impact clinical characteristics or outcome in this cohort. These data identify HCL as having the highest frequency of CDKN1B mutations among cancers and identify CDNK1B as the second most common mutated gene in HCL. Moreover, given the known function of CDNK1B, these data suggest a novel role for alterations in regulation of cell cycle and senescence in HCL with CDKN1B mutations.


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