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Exome sequencing characterizes the somatic mutation spectrum of early serrated lesions in a patient with serrated polyposis syndrome (SPS)

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Item Type:Article
Title:Exome sequencing characterizes the somatic mutation spectrum of early serrated lesions in a patient with serrated polyposis syndrome (SPS)
Creators Name:Horpaopan, S. and Kirfel, J. and Peters, S. and Kloth, M. and Hüneburg, R. and Altmüller, J. and Drichel, D. and Odenthal, M. and Kristiansen, G. and Strassburg, C. and Nattermann, J. and Hoffmann, P. and Nürnberg, P. and Büttner, R. and Thiele, H. and Kahl, P. and Spier, I. and Aretz, S.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: Serrated or Hyperplastic Polyposis Syndrome (SPS, HPS) is a yet poorly defined colorectal cancer (CRC) predisposition characterised by the occurrence of multiple and/or large serrated polyps throughout the colon. A serrated polyp-CRC sequence (serrated pathway) of CRC formation has been postulated, however, to date only few molecular signatures of serrated neoplasia (BRAF, KRAS, RNF43 mutations, CpG Island Methylation, MSI) have been described in a subset of SPS patients and neither the etiology of the syndrome nor the distinct genetic alterations during tumorigenesis have been identified. METHODS: To identify somatic point mutations in potential novel candidate genes of SPS-associated lesions and the involved pathways we performed exome sequencing of eleven early serrated polyps obtained from a 41 year-old female patient with clinically confirmed SPS. For data filtering and analysis, standard pipelines were used. Somatic mutations were identified by comparison with leukocyte DNA and were validated by Sanger sequencing. RESULTS: The BRAF p.V600E or KRAS p.G12D mutation was identified in six polyps (~50%) and not found in polyps from the distal colon. In addition, we found seven unique rare somatic alterations of seven different genes in four serrated tumours, all of which are missense variants. The variant in ABI3BP and CATSPERB are predicted to be deleterious. No established cancer gene or candidate genes related to serrated tumorigenesis were affected. CONCLUSIONS: Somatic mutations seem to be rare events in early hyperplastic and serrated lesions of SPS patients. Neither frequently affected genes nor enrichment of specific pathways were observed. Thus, other alterations such as non-coding variants or epigenetic changes might be the major driving force of tumour progression in SPS.
Keywords:Familial Colorectal Cancer (CRC), Exome Sequencing, Hyperplastic Polyposis Syndrome (HPS), Serrated Polyposis Syndrome (SPS), Serrated Pathway, Somatic Mutations
Source:Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
ISSN:1731-2302
Publisher:BMC
Volume:15
Page Range:22
Date:29 November 2017
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13053-017-0082-9
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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