Mutations in SETD2 and genes affecting histone H3K36 methylation target hemispheric high-grade gliomas

Adam M. Fontebasso(McGill University Health Centre), Jeremy Schwartzentruber(McGill University and Génome Québec Innovation Centre), Dong-Anh Khuong-Quang(McGill University Health Centre), Xiao-Yang Liu(McGill University Health Centre), Dominik Sturm(German Cancer Research Center), Andrey Korshunov(German Cancer Research Center), David Jones(German Cancer Research Center), Hendrik Witt(German Cancer Research Center), Marcel Kool(German Cancer Research Center), Steffen Albrecht(Montreal Children's Hospital), Adam Fleming(Montreal Children's Hospital), Djihad Hadjadj(McGill University Health Centre), Stephan Busche(McGill University Health Centre), Pierre Lepage(McGill University and Génome Québec Innovation Centre), Alexandre Montpetit(McGill University and Génome Québec Innovation Centre), Alfredo Staffa(McGill University and Génome Québec Innovation Centre), Noha Gerges(McGill University Health Centre), Magdalena Zakrzewska(Medical University of Lodz), Krzysztof Zakrzewski(Polish Mother’s Memorial Hospital Research Institute), Paweł P. Liberski(Medical University of Lodz), Péter Hauser(Semmelweis University), Miklós Garami(Semmelweis University), Álmos Klekner(University of Debrecen), László Bognár(University of Debrecen), Gelareh Zadeh(Toronto Western Hospital), Damien Faury(McGill University Health Centre), Stefan M. Pfister(German Cancer Research Center), Nada Jabado(Montreal Children's Hospital), Jacek Majewski(McGill University Health Centre)
Acta Neuropathologica
February 15, 2013
Cited by 291Open Access
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Abstract

Recurrent mutations affecting the histone H3.3 residues Lys27 or indirectly Lys36 are frequent drivers of pediatric high-grade gliomas (over 30% of HGGs). To identify additional driver mutations in HGGs, we investigated a cohort of 60 pediatric HGGs using whole-exome sequencing (WES) and compared them to 543 exomes from non-cancer control samples. We identified mutations in SETD2, a H3K36 trimethyltransferase, in 15% of pediatric HGGs, a result that was genome-wide significant (FDR = 0.029). Most SETD2 alterations were truncating mutations. Sequencing the gene in this cohort and another validation cohort (123 gliomas from all ages and grades) showed SETD2 mutations to be specific to high-grade tumors affecting 15% of pediatric HGGs (11/73) and 8% of adult HGGs (5/65) while no SETD2 mutations were identified in low-grade diffuse gliomas (0/45). Furthermore, SETD2 mutations were mutually exclusive with H3F3A mutations in HGGs (P = 0.0492) while they partly overlapped with IDH1 mutations (4/14), and SETD2-mutant tumors were found exclusively in the cerebral hemispheres (P = 0.0055). SETD2 is the only H3K36 trimethyltransferase in humans, and SETD2-mutant tumors showed a substantial decrease in H3K36me3 levels (P < 0.001), indicating that the mutations are loss-of-function. These data suggest that loss-of-function SETD2 mutations occur in older children and young adults and are specific to HGG of the cerebral cortex, similar to the H3.3 G34R/V and IDH mutations. Taken together, our results suggest that mutations disrupting the histone code at H3K36, including H3.3 G34R/V, IDH1 and/or SETD2 mutations, are central to the genesis of hemispheric HGGs in older children and young adults.


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