Cell Reports (Nov 2019)

Identification and Analyses of Extra-Cranial and Cranial Rhabdoid Tumor Molecular Subgroups Reveal Tumors with Cytotoxic T Cell Infiltration

  • Hye-Jung E. Chun,
  • Pascal D. Johann,
  • Katy Milne,
  • Marc Zapatka,
  • Annette Buellesbach,
  • Naveed Ishaque,
  • Murat Iskar,
  • Serap Erkek,
  • Lisa Wei,
  • Basile Tessier-Cloutier,
  • Jake Lever,
  • Emma Titmuss,
  • James T. Topham,
  • Reanne Bowlby,
  • Eric Chuah,
  • Karen L. Mungall,
  • Yussanne Ma,
  • Andrew J. Mungall,
  • Richard A. Moore,
  • Michael D. Taylor,
  • Daniela S. Gerhard,
  • Steven J.M. Jones,
  • Andrey Korshunov,
  • Manfred Gessler,
  • Kornelius Kerl,
  • Martin Hasselblatt,
  • Michael C. Frühwald,
  • Elizabeth J. Perlman,
  • Brad H. Nelson,
  • Stefan M. Pfister,
  • Marco A. Marra,
  • Marcel Kool

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 8
pp. 2338 – 2354.e7

Abstract

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Summary: Extra-cranial malignant rhabdoid tumors (MRTs) and cranial atypical teratoid RTs (ATRTs) are heterogeneous pediatric cancers driven primarily by SMARCB1 loss. To understand the genome-wide molecular relationships between MRTs and ATRTs, we analyze multi-omics data from 140 MRTs and 161 ATRTs. We detect similarities between the MYC subgroup of ATRTs (ATRT-MYC) and extra-cranial MRTs, including global DNA hypomethylation and overexpression of HOX genes and genes involved in mesenchymal development, distinguishing them from other ATRT subgroups that express neural-like features. We identify five DNA methylation subgroups associated with anatomical sites and SMARCB1 mutation patterns. Groups 1, 3, and 4 exhibit cytotoxic T cell infiltration and expression of immune checkpoint regulators, consistent with a potential role for immunotherapy in rhabdoid tumor patients. : Chun et al. report similarities between the MYC subgroup of cranial and extra-cranial rhabdoid tumors (RTs) at genetic, gene-expression, and epigenetic levels. They identify five DNA methylation subgroups of RTs across multiple organ sites, and some subgroups exhibit increased levels of immune cell infiltration and immune checkpoint expression. Keywords: Malignant rhabdoid tumor, atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor, pediatric cancer, SMARCB1, molecular subgroups, genomic and epigenomic dysregulation, HOX dysregulation, cytotoxic T cell infiltration, tumor-infiltrating immune cells