Acta Neuropathologica Communications (Aug 2024)

Recurrent adamantinomatous craniopharyngiomas show MAPK pathway activation, clonal evolution and rare TP53-loss-mediated malignant progression

  • John R. Apps,
  • Jose Mario Gonzalez-Meljem,
  • Romain Guiho,
  • Jessica C. Pickles,
  • Eric Prince,
  • Edward Schwalbe,
  • Nikhil Joshi,
  • Thomas J. Stone,
  • Olumide Ogunbiyi,
  • Jane Chalker,
  • Akang Bassey,
  • Georg Otto,
  • Rosalind Davies,
  • Debbie Hughes,
  • Sebastian Brandner,
  • Enrica Tan,
  • Victoria Lee,
  • Caroline Hayhurst,
  • Cassie Kline,
  • Sergi Castellano,
  • Todd Hankinson,
  • Timo Deutschbein,
  • Thomas S. Jacques,
  • Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40478-024-01838-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract The two types of craniopharyngioma, adamantinomatous (ACP) and papillary (PCP), are clinically relevant tumours in children and adults. Although the biology of primary craniopharyngioma is starting to be unravelled, little is known about the biology of recurrence. To fill this gap in knowledge, we have analysed through methylation array, RNA sequencing and pERK1/2 immunohistochemistry a cohort of paired primary and recurrent samples (32 samples from 14 cases of ACP and 4 cases of PCP). We show the presence of copy number alterations and clonal evolution across recurrence in 6 cases of ACP, and analysis of additional whole genome sequencing data from the Children’s Brain Tumour Network confirms chromosomal arm copy number changes in at least 7/67 ACP cases. The activation of the MAPK/ERK pathway, a feature previously shown in primary ACP, is observed in all but one recurrent cases of ACP. The only ACP without MAPK activation is an aggressive case of recurrent malignant human craniopharyngioma harbouring a CTNNB1 mutation and loss of TP53. Providing support for a functional role of this TP53 mutation, we show that Trp53 loss in a murine model of ACP results in aggressive tumours and reduced mouse survival. Finally, we characterise the tumour immune infiltrate showing differences in the cellular composition and spatial distribution between ACP and PCP. Together, these analyses have revealed novel insights into recurrent craniopharyngioma and provided preclinical evidence supporting the evaluation of MAPK pathway inhibitors and immunomodulatory approaches in clinical trials in against recurrent ACP.

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