PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

KIT Mutation and Loss of 14q May Be Sufficient for the Development of Clinically Symptomatic Very Low-Risk GIST.

  • Olaf Karl Klinke,
  • Tuba Mizani,
  • Gouri Baldwin,
  • Brigitte Bancel,
  • Mojgan Devouassoux-Shisheboran,
  • Jean-Yves Scoazec,
  • Pierre-Paul Bringuier,
  • Regina Feederle,
  • Anna Jauch,
  • Katrin Hinderhofer,
  • Philippe Taniere,
  • Henri-Jacques Delecluse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130149
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. e0130149

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to determine the minimal set of genetic alterations required for the development of a very low risk clinically symptomatic gastro-intestinal stromal tumour within the stomach wall. We studied the genome of a very low-risk gastric gastro-intestinal stromal tumour by whole-genome sequencing, comparative genomic hybridisation and methylation profiling. The studied tumour harboured two typical genomic lesions: loss of the long arm of chromosome 14 and an activating mutation in exon 11 of KIT. Besides these genetic lesions, only two point mutations that may affect tumour progression were identified: A frame-shift deletion in RNF146 and a missense mutation in a zinc finger of ZNF407. Whilst the frameshift deletion in RNF146 seemed to be restricted to this particular tumour, a similar yet germline mutation in ZNF407 was found in a panel of 52 gastro-intestinal stromal tumours from different anatomical sites and different categories. Germline polymorphisms in the mitotic checkpoint proteins Aurora kinase A and BUB1 kinase B may have furthered tumour growth. The epigenetic profile of the tumour matches that of other KIT-mutant tumours. We have identified mutations in three genes and loss of the long arm of chromosome 14 as the so far minimal set of genetic abnormalities sufficient for the development of a very low risk clinically symptomatic gastric stromal tumour.