The telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter, an important element of telomerase expression, has emerged as a target of cancer-specific mutations. Originally described in melanoma, the mutations in TERT promoter have been shown to be common in certain other tumor types that include glioblastoma, hepatocellular carcinoma, and bladder cancer. To fully define the occurrence and effect of the TERT promoter mutations, we investigated tumors from a well-characterized series of 327 patients with urothelial cell carcinoma of bladder. The somatic mutations, mainly at positions −124 and −146 bp from ATG start site that create binding motifs for E-twenty six/ternary complex factors (Ets/TCF), affected 65.4% of the tumors, with even distribution across different stages and grades. Our data showed that a common polymorphism rs2853669, within a preexisting Ets2 binding site in the TERT promoter, acts as a modifier of the effect of the mutations on survival and tumor recurrence. The patients with the mutations showed poor survival in the absence [hazard ratio (HR) 2.19, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.02-4.70] but not in the presence (HR 0.42, 95% CI 0.18-1.01) of the variant allele of the polymorphism. The mutations in the absence of the variant allele were highly associated with the disease recurrence in patients with Tis, Ta, and T1 tumors (HR 1.85, 95% CI 1.11-3.08). The TERT promoter mutations are the most common somatic lesions in bladder cancer with clinical implications. The association of the mutations with patient survival and disease recurrence, subject to modification by a common polymorphism, can be a unique putative marker with individualized prognostic potential.TERT mutations | cancer genetics | transcription factors | noncoding mutations | reporter assays T he human telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) gene encodes the catalytic reverse transcriptase subunit of telomerase that maintains telomere length (1). Increased telomerase activity is perceived to be one of the hallmarks of human cancers, and the transcriptional regulation of the TERT gene is the major cause of its cancer-specific activation (2, 3). The TERT promoter has been shown to be the most important element of telomerase expression because it harbors binding sites for numerous cellular transcriptional activators and repressors that directly or indirectly regulate the gene expression (4). In addition, the high GC content around the transcription start site of the TERT promoter confers epigenetic regulation through methylation and chromatin remodeling (5, 6).We previously described a high-penetrant disease segregating single-nucleotide germ-line mutation in the TERT promoter in a large melanoma family (7). The A > C (T > G) mutation at position −57 bp (from the ATG start site; Chr 5:1295161 hg19 coordinate) resulted in creation of a new binding motif GGAA/T for E-twenty six (Ets) transcription factors and a general binding CCGGAA/T motif for ternary complex factors (TCF) (8). Simultaneous screening of the TERT promoter for somatic mutations...
We previously reported a disease segregating causal germline mutation in a melanoma family and recurrent somatic mutations in metastasized tumours from unrelated patients in the core promoter region of the telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) gene. Here we show that the TERT promoter mutations, besides causing an increased gene expression, associate with increased patient age, increased Breslow thickness and tumour ulceration in 287 primary melanomas. The mutations are more frequent at both intermittently and chronically sun-exposed sites than non-exposed sites and tend to co-occur with BRAF and CDKN2A alterations. The association with parameters generally connected with poor outcome, coupled with high recurrence and mechanistic relevance, raises the possibility of the eventual use of TERT promoter mutations in the disease management.
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