Genetic heterogeneity of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma

Jenny Zhang(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Vladimir Grubor, Cassandra Love, Anjishnu Banerjee(Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute), Kristy L. Richards(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Piotr A. Mieczkowski(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Cherie H. Dunphy(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), William Choi(Queen Mary Hospital), Wing Y. Au(Queen Mary Hospital), Gopesh Srivastava(Queen Mary Hospital), Patricia Lugar(Duke Medical Center), David A. Rizzieri(Duke Medical Center), Anand S. Lagoo(Duke Medical Center), Leon Bernal‐Mizrachi(Emory University), Karen P. Mann(Emory University), Christopher R. Flowers(Emory University), Kikkeri N. Naresh(Imperial College London), Andrew M. Evens(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Leo I. Gordon(Northwestern University), Magdalena Czader(Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis), Javed Gill(Baylor University Medical Center), Eric D. Hsi(Cleveland Clinic), Qingquan Liu, Alice C. Fan, Katherine H. Walsh, Dereje D. Jima, Lisa L. Smith(The Ohio State University), Amy J. Johnson(The Ohio State University), John C. Byrd(The Ohio State University), Micah A. Luftig(Duke Medical Center), Ting Ni(National Institutes of Health), Jun Zhu(National Institutes of Health), Amy Chadburn(Northwestern University), Shawn Levy(HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology), David B. Dunson(Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute), Sandeep S. Davé(Cancer Institute (WIA))
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 4, 2013
Cited by 534Open Access
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Abstract

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common form of lymphoma in adults. The disease exhibits a striking heterogeneity in gene expression profiles and clinical outcomes, but its genetic causes remain to be fully defined. Through whole genome and exome sequencing, we characterized the genetic diversity of DLBCL. In all, we sequenced 73 DLBCL primary tumors (34 with matched normal DNA). Separately, we sequenced the exomes of 21 DLBCL cell lines. We identified 322 DLBCL cancer genes that were recurrently mutated in primary DLBCLs. We identified recurrent mutations implicating a number of known and not previously identified genes and pathways in DLBCL including those related to chromatin modification (ARID1A and MEF2B), NF-κB (CARD11 and TNFAIP3), PI3 kinase (PIK3CD, PIK3R1, and MTOR), B-cell lineage (IRF8, POU2F2, and GNA13), and WNT signaling (WIF1). We also experimentally validated a mutation in PIK3CD, a gene not previously implicated in lymphomas. The patterns of mutation demonstrated a classic long tail distribution with substantial variation of mutated genes from patient to patient and also between published studies. Thus, our study reveals the tremendous genetic heterogeneity that underlies lymphomas and highlights the need for personalized medicine approaches to treating these patients.


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