<i>NFKBIA</i> Deletion in Glioblastomas

Markus Bredel(University of Freiburg), Denise Scholtens(Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University), Ajay K. Yadav(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Angel A. Alvarez(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Jaclyn J. Renfrow(Cancer Genetics (United States)), James P. Chandler(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Irene L.Y. Yu(University of Freiburg), Maria Stella Carro(University of Freiburg), Fangping Dai(University of Freiburg), Michael J. Tagge(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Roberto Ferrarese(University of Freiburg), Claudia Bredel(University of Freiburg), Heidi Phillips, Paul J. Lukac(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Pierre A. Robe(University of Liège), Astrid Weyerbrock(University of Freiburg), Hannes Vogel(Stanford University), Steven Dubner(Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University), Bret C. Mobley(Stanford University), Xiaolin He, Adrienne C. Scheck(Barrow Neurological Institute), Branimir I. Šikić(Stanford University), Kenneth Aldape(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Arnab Chakravarti(The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute), Griffith R. Harsh
New England Journal of Medicine
December 22, 2010
Cited by 243Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Amplification and activating mutations of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) oncogene are molecular hallmarks of glioblastomas. We hypothesized that deletion of NFKBIA (encoding nuclear factor of κ-light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells inhibitor-α), an inhibitor of the EGFR-signaling pathway, promotes tumorigenesis in glioblastomas that do not have alterations of EGFR. METHODS: We analyzed 790 human glioblastomas for deletions, mutations, or expression of NFKBIA and EGFR. We studied the tumor-suppressor activity of NFKBIA in tumor-cell culture. We compared the molecular results with the outcome of glioblastoma in 570 affected persons. RESULTS: NFKBIA is often deleted but not mutated in glioblastomas; most deletions occur in nonclassical subtypes of the disease. Deletion of NFKBIA and amplification of EGFR show a pattern of mutual exclusivity. Restoration of the expression of NFKBIA attenuated the malignant phenotype and increased the vulnerability to chemotherapy of cells cultured from tumors with NFKBIA deletion; it also reduced the viability of cells with EGFR amplification but not of cells with normal gene dosages of both NFKBIA and EGFR. Deletion and low expression of NFKBIA were associated with unfavorable outcomes. Patients who had tumors with NFKBIA deletion had outcomes that were similar to those in patients with tumors harboring EGFR amplification. These outcomes were poor as compared with the outcomes in patients with tumors that had normal gene dosages of NFKBIA and EGFR. A two-gene model that was based on expression of NFKBIA and O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase was strongly associated with the clinical course of the disease. CONCLUSIONS: Deletion of NFKBIA has an effect that is similar to the effect of EGFR amplification in the pathogenesis of glioblastoma and is associated with comparatively short survival.


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