Stem Cell Research (Jan 2018)

Transcriptional landscape of a RETC634Y-mutated iPSC and its CRISPR-corrected isogenic control reveals the putative role of EGR1 transcriptional program in the development of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A-associated cancers

  • Julien Hadoux,
  • Christophe Desterke,
  • Olivier Féraud,
  • Mathieu Guibert,
  • Roberta Francesca De Rose,
  • Paule Opolon,
  • Dominique Divers,
  • Emilie Gobbo,
  • Frank Griscelli,
  • Martin Schlumberger,
  • Annelise Bennaceur-Griscelli,
  • Ali G. Turhan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
pp. 8 – 16

Abstract

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Summary: MEN2A is a hereditary cancer-predisposing syndrome that affects patients with germline RET mutations. The effects of this oncogenic tyrosine kinase in the context of primitive stem cells are not known. In order to study these events, we generated a MEN2A induced Pluripotent Stem Cell (iPSC) line from a patient with RET mutation and an isogenic counterpart by CRISPR-Cas9 correction of the mutation. Whole exome sequencing of iPSC before and after CRISPR-Cas9 genome edition revealed no major exonic off target effect of the CRISPR correction. However, an integrative differential gene expression analysis of iPSC with oncogenic RETC634Y and its gene-corrected iPSC with RETY634C as well as RETwt iPSCs revealed activation of the Early Growth Response 1 (EGR1) transcriptional program in RET-mutated iPSC, a pathway shown to be involved in RET-induced oncogenesis. These data constitute the first proof of concept of the feasibility of the use of an iPSC and its genome-corrected counterpart to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the development of the hereditary MEN2A cancer predisposing syndrome.