4.8 Article

The landscape of somatic mutations in infant MLL-rearranged acute lymphoblastic leukemias

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 47, Issue 4, Pages 330-U192

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/ng.3230

Keywords

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Funding

  1. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital-Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project
  2. American Lebanese and Syrian Associated Charities of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
  3. US National Institutes of Health [P30 CA021765]
  4. Swedish Childhood Cancer Society
  5. Swedish Research Council
  6. Swedish Cancer Society
  7. BioCARE
  8. Gunnar Nilsson Cancer Foundation

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Infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with MLL rearrangements (MLL-R) represents a distinct leukemia with a poor prognosis. To define its mutational landscape, we performed whole-genome, exome, RNA and targeted DNA sequencing on 65 infants (47 MLL-R and 18 non-MLL-R cases) and 20 older children (MLL-R cases) with leukemia. Our data show that infant MLL-R ALL has one of the lowest frequencies of somatic mutations of any sequenced cancer, with the predominant leukemic clone carrying a mean of 1.3 non-silent mutations. Despite this paucity of mutations, we detected activating mutations in kinase-PI3K-RAS signaling pathway components in 47% of cases. Surprisingly, these mutations were often subclonal and were frequently lost at relapse. In contrast to infant cases, MLL-R leukemia in older children had more somatic mutations (mean of 6.5 mutations/case versus 1.3 mutations/case, P = 7.15 x 10(-5)) and had frequent mutations (45%) in epigenetic regulators, a category of genes that, with the exception of MLL, was rarely mutated in infant MLL-R ALL.

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