npj Precision Oncology (Sep 2024)

Large-scale analysis of CDH1 mutations defines a distinctive molecular subset with treatment implications in gastric cancer

  • Jingyuan Wang,
  • Joanne Xiu,
  • Francesca Battaglin,
  • Hiroyuki Arai,
  • Shivani Soni,
  • Wu Zhang,
  • Richard M. Goldberg,
  • Philip A. Philip,
  • Andreas Seeber,
  • Jimmy J. Hwang,
  • Anthony F. Shields,
  • John L. Marshall,
  • Igor Astaturov,
  • Tianshu Liu,
  • A. Craig Lockhart,
  • W. Michael Korn,
  • Lin Shen,
  • Heinz-Josef Lenz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41698-024-00694-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Although histological and molecular classifications have been extensively studied for gastric cancer (GC), targeted therapies for GC remain limited. CDH1 mutations (MT) are characteristic of genomically stable GC and are associated with poor prognosis, but lack effective or targeted therapies. Here, we showed the overall mutation frequency of CDH1 was 9.7% (155 of 1596). CDH1-MT GC showed significantly lower rates of PD-L1 positivity (CPS score ≥1) than CDH1-wildtype (WT) GC (56.7% vs. 73.3%, p < 0.05). Compared to CDH1-WT GC, mutations of ARID1A, WRN, POT1, CDK12, and FANCC were significantly higher, while TP53 and APC were significantly lower in CDH1-MT GC (p < 0.05); The rates of KRAS and HER2 amplifications were significantly lower, while CRKL and IGF1R amplifications were significantly higher in CDH1-MT GC, compared to CDH1-WT GC (p < 0.05). Frequently altered genes in CDH1-MT GC were especially enriched in DNA damage repair and cell cycle checkpoint pathways. Inhibition of E-cadherin sensitized GC cell lines to PARP and Wee1 inhibitors by disrupting DNA damage repair pathway and cell cycle checkpoint. This is the largest study to investigate the distinct genomic landscape of CDH1-MT GC. Our data indicated GC patients with CDH1 mutations could potentially benefit from agents targeting PARP and Wee1.