Identification of Variant-Specific Functions of <i>PIK3CA</i> by Rapid Phenotyping of Rare Mutations

Turgut Dogruluk(Baylor College of Medicine), Yiu Huen Tsang(Baylor College of Medicine), Maribel Espitia(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Fengju Chen(Baylor College of Medicine), Tenghui Chen(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Zechen Chong(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Vivek Appadurai(Baylor College of Medicine), Armel Dogruluk(Baylor College of Medicine), Agna Karina Eterovic(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Penelope E. Bonnen(Baylor College of Medicine), Chad J. Creighton(Baylor College of Medicine), Ken Chen(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Gordon B. Mills(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Kenneth L. Scott(Baylor College of Medicine)
Cancer Research
December 1, 2015
Cited by 178

Abstract

Large-scale sequencing efforts are uncovering the complexity of cancer genomes, which are composed of causal "driver" mutations that promote tumor progression along with many more pathologically neutral "passenger" events. The majority of mutations, both in known cancer drivers and uncharacterized genes, are generally of low occurrence, highlighting the need to functionally annotate the long tail of infrequent mutations present in heterogeneous cancers. Here we describe a mutation assessment pipeline enabled by high-throughput engineering of molecularly barcoded gene variant expression clones identified by tumor sequencing. We first used this platform to functionally assess tail mutations observed in PIK3CA, which encodes the catalytic subunit alpha of the phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase (PI3K) frequently mutated in cancer. Orthogonal screening for PIK3CA variant activity using in vitro and in vivo cell growth and transformation assays differentiated driver from passenger mutations, revealing that PIK3CA variant activity correlates imperfectly with its mutation frequency across breast cancer populations. Although PIK3CA mutations with frequencies above 5% were significantly more oncogenic than wild-type in all assays, mutations occurring at 0.07% to 5.0% included those with and without oncogenic activities that ranged from weak to strong in at least one assay. Proteomic profiling coupled with therapeutic sensitivity assays on PIK3CA variant-expressing cell models revealed variant-specific activation of PI3K signaling as well as other pathways that include the MEK1/2 module of mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Our data indicate that cancer treatments will need to increasingly consider the functional relevance of specific mutations in driver genes rather than considering all mutations in drivers as equivalent.


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