Frequent inactivation of the <scp><i>BAP1</i></scp> gene in epithelioid‐type malignant mesothelioma

Yoshie Yoshikawa, Ayuko Sato(Hyogo Medical University), Tohru Tsujimura(Hyogo Medical University), Mitsuru Emi(University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa), Tomonori Morinaga, Kazuya Fukuoka(Respiratory Clinical Trials), Shusai Yamada(Respiratory Clinical Trials), Aki Murakami(Respiratory Clinical Trials), Nobuyuki Kondo(Hyogo Medical University), Seiji Matsumoto(Hyogo Medical University), Yoshitomo Okumura(Hyogo Medical University), Fumihiro Tanaka(Hyogo Medical University), Seiki Hasegawa(Hyogo Medical University), Takashi Nakano(Respiratory Clinical Trials), Tomoko Hashimoto‐Tamaoki
Cancer Science
February 9, 2012
Cited by 177Open Access
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Abstract

In the present study, we analyzed genomic alterations of BRCA1-associated protein 1 (BAP1) in 23 malignant mesotheliomas (MMs), 16 epithelioid and seven non-epithelioid, consisting of 18 clinical specimens and five established cell lines. In examining these samples for homozygous deletions and sequence-level mutations, we found biallelic BAP1 gene alterations in 14 of 23 MMs (61%). Seven of these 14 MMs had homozygous deletions of the partial or entire BAP1 gene, another five had sequence-level mutations, including small deletions, a nonsense mutation, and missense mutations with additional monoallelic deletions, and the remaining two had homozygous mutations without allelic loss. All but one of the 14 BAP1 gene mutations were found in the epithelioid-type MMs; BAP1 mutations were found in 13 of 16 epithelioid-type MMs, but in only one of seven non-epithelioid-type MMs (13/16 vs 1/7; P = 0.005). There was no BAP1 mRNA expression in MMs with biallelic deletion and repressed expression was confirmed in MM specimens with deletion/mutation as compared with Met5a, SV40-transformed normal mesothelial cells. Western blot showed that seven of eight epithelioid MMs analyzed were BAP1 negative. Immunostaining with anti-BAP1 antibody in normal lung tissues revealed clear nuclear staining of normal mesothelial cells. No nuclear staining was observed among BAP1 mutation-positive MM tumors, whereas nuclear staining was observed among BAP1 mutation-negative MM tumors. These results suggest that the lack of the tumor suppressor BAP1 may be more specifically involved in the pathogenesis of epithelioid MM rather than non-epithelioid MM, and would be useful for diagnosis of epithelioid-type MM.


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