Cancers (Jul 2020)

Loss of Function SETD2 Mutations in Poorly Differentiated Metastases from Two Hürthle Cell Carcinomas of the Thyroid

  • Valeria Pecce,
  • Antonella Verrienti,
  • Luana Abballe,
  • Raffaella Carletti,
  • Giorgio Grani,
  • Rosa Falcone,
  • Valeria Ramundo,
  • Cosimo Durante,
  • Cira Di Gioia,
  • Diego Russo,
  • Sebastiano Filetti,
  • Marialuisa Sponziello

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12071892
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 1892

Abstract

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Hürthle cell carcinomas (HCC) are rare differentiated thyroid cancers that display low avidity for radioactive iodine and respond poorly to kinase inhibitors. Here, using next-generation sequencing, we analyzed the mutational status of primary tissue and poorly differentiated metastatic tissue from two HCC patients. In both cases, metastatic tissues harbored a mutation of SETD2, each resulting in loss of the SRI and WW domains of SETD2, a methyltransferase that trimethylates H3K36 (H3K36me3) and also interacts with p53 to promote its stability. Functional studies of the novel p.D1890fs6* mutation (case 1) revealed significantly reduced H3K36me3 levels in SETD2-mutated tissue and primary cell cultures and decreased levels of the active form of p53. Restoration of SETD2-wildtype expression in the SETD2-mutant cells significantly reduced the expression of four well-known stemness markers (OCT-4, SOX2, IPF1, Goosecoid). These findings suggest potential roles for SETD2 loss-of-function mutations in HCC progression, possibly involving p53 destabilization and promotion of stemness. Their prevalence and potential treatment implications in thyroid cancer, especially HCC, require further study.

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