Coexistent ARID1A–PIK3CA mutations promote ovarian clear-cell tumorigenesis through pro-tumorigenic inflammatory cytokine signalling

Ronald L. Chandler(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jeffrey S. Damrauer(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jesse R. Raab(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jonathan C. Schisler(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Matthew D. Wilkerson(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), John P. Didion(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Joshua Starmer(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Daniel Serber(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Della Yee(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jessie Xiong(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), David B. Darr(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Fernando Pardo‐Manuel de Villena(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), William Y. Kim(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Terry Magnuson(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Nature Communications
January 27, 2015
Cited by 317Open Access
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Abstract

Ovarian clear-cell carcinoma (OCCC) is an aggressive form of ovarian cancer with high ARID1A mutation rates. Here we present a mutant mouse model of OCCC. We find that ARID1A inactivation is not sufficient for tumour formation, but requires concurrent activation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase catalytic subunit, PIK3CA. Remarkably, the mice develop highly penetrant tumours with OCCC-like histopathology, culminating in haemorrhagic ascites and a median survival period of 7.5 weeks. Therapeutic treatment with the pan-PI3K inhibitor, BKM120, prolongs mouse survival by inhibiting the tumour cell growth. Cross-species gene expression comparisons support a role for IL-6 inflammatory cytokine signalling in OCCC pathogenesis. We further show that ARID1A and PIK3CA mutations cooperate to promote tumour growth through sustained IL-6 overproduction. Our findings establish an epistatic relationship between SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling and PI3K pathway mutations in OCCC and demonstrate that these pathways converge on pro-tumorigenic cytokine signalling. We propose that ARID1A protects against inflammation-driven tumorigenesis. ARID1A is frequently mutated in ovarian clear-cell carcinoma. Here the authors show that ARID1A loss in mice cooperates with PI3K activation to recapitulate the human disease, and implicate IL-6 signalling as the underlying mechanism.


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