Genetic alterations associated with progression from pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia to invasive pancreatic tumor

与胰腺上皮内瘤变进展为侵袭性胰腺肿瘤相关的基因改变

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作者:Stephen J Murphy, Steven N Hart, Joema Felipe Lima, Benjamin R Kipp, Mitchell Klebig, Jennifer L Winters, Csilla Szabo, Lizhi Zhang, Bruce W Eckloff, Gloria M Petersen, Steven E Scherer, Richard A Gibbs, Robert R McWilliams, George Vasmatzis, Fergus J Couch

Aims

Increasing grade of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) has been associated with progression to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). However, the mechanisms that control progression from PanINs to PDAC are not well understood. We investigated the genetic alterations involved in this process.

Background & aims

Increasing grade of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) has been associated with progression to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). However, the mechanisms that control progression from PanINs to PDAC are not well understood. We investigated the genetic alterations involved in this process.

Conclusions

Early stage PanIN2 lesions appear to contain many of the somatic gene alterations required for PDAC development.

Methods

Genomic DNA samples from laser-capture microdissected PDACs and adjacent PanIN2 and PanIN3 lesions from 10 patients with pancreatic cancer were analyzed by exome sequencing.

Results

Similar numbers of somatic mutations were identified in PanINs and tumors, but the mutational load varied greatly among cases. Ten of the 15 isolated PanINs shared more than 50% of somatic mutations with associated tumors. Mutations common to tumors and clonally related PanIN2 and PanIN3 lesions were identified as genes that could promote carcinogenesis. KRAS and TP53 frequently were altered in PanINs and tumors, but few other recurrently modified genes were detected. Mutations in DNA damage response genes were prevalent in all samples. Genes that encode proteins involved in gap junctions, the actin cytoskeleton, the mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathway, axon guidance, and cell-cycle regulation were among the earliest targets of mutagenesis in PanINs that progressed to PDAC. Conclusions: Early stage PanIN2 lesions appear to contain many of the somatic gene alterations required for PDAC development.

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