Carney triad (CT) is a rare condition with synchronous or metachronous occurrence of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), paragangliomas (PGLs), and pulmonary chondromas in a patient. In contrast to Carney–Stratakis syndrome (CSS) and familial PGL syndromes, no germline or somatic mutations in the succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) complex subunits A, B, C, or D have been found in most tumors and/or patients with CT. Nonetheless, the tumors arising among patients with CT, CSS, or familial PGL share a similar morphology with loss of the SDHB subunit on the protein level. For the current study, we employed massive parallel bisulfite sequencing to evaluate DNA methylation patterns in CpG islands in proximity to the gene loci of all four SDH subunits. For the first time, we report on a recurrent aberrant dense DNA methylation at the gene locus of SDHC in tumors of patients with CT, which was not present in tumors of patients with CSS or PGL, or in sporadic GISTs with KIT mutations. This DNA methylation pattern was correlated to a reduced mRNA expression of SDHC, and concurrent loss of the SDHC subunit on the protein level. Collectively, these data suggest epigenetic inactivation of the SDHC gene locus with functional impairment of the SDH complex as a plausible alternate mechanism of tumorigenesis in CT.
Alterations in SMARCA4, a member of the chromatin remodeling Switch Sucrose Non-Fermentable (SWI/SNF) complex, characterize a subset of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but detailed morphological and immunophenotypic description of this tumor type is lacking. We describe 20 NSCLC cases found on routine screening not to express SMARCA4 by immunohistochemistry (IHC). These tumors were stained for CK7, TTF1, SMARCA2, SMARCA4, SMARCB1, and HepPar-1 and analyzed for molecular alterations, using a 160 cancer-related gene panel including the full coding sequence of SMARCA4. Patients were eight females and 12 males aged 41 to 76 (median, 60). Of 18 tumors with detailed data, 14 presented with synchronous distant metastases (M1). Histological examination showed predominantly solid adenocarcinoma (n = 15), frankly rhabdoid (n = 3) and mucinous (n = 2) patterns. Except for the rhabdoid cases, all tumors showed at least focal unequivocal glands and lacked squamous differentiation, justifying a diagnosis of adenocarcinoma. IHC showed a distinctive uniform immunophenotype (CK7/HepPar-1/TTF1) in 18/20 cases. Only 2/16 cases showed limited weak expression of neuroendocrine markers. EGFR mutations and EML4-ALK and ROS1 gene rearrangements were not found in any of the examined cases. Next-generation sequencing, using a 160 cancer-related gene panel, revealed concurrent SMARCA4 and TP53 mutations in nine of the 12 (75%) successfully tested cases. Our study highlights (1) the morphological diversity of SMARCA4-deficient lung adenocarcinoma, (2) the consistent absence of expression of TTF1 in the presence of expression of HepPar-1, (3) absence of EGFR driver mutations, and (4) frequent inactivating SMARCA4 mutations as underlying mechanism of the observed SMARCA4 protein loss. SMARCA4-deficient pulmonary adenocarcinoma is emerging as a distinctive, albeit phenotypically heterogeneous molecular subgroup of TTF1-negative NSCLC. Uniform HepPar-1 expression in this subset of NSCLC may represent a diagnostic pitfall and merits further studies to explore the mechanisms involved.
The molecular pathogenesis of salivary gland acinic cell carcinoma (AciCC) is poorly understood. The secretory Ca-binding phosphoprotein (SCPP) gene cluster at 4q13 encodes structurally related phosphoproteins of which some are specifically expressed at high levels in the salivary glands and constitute major components of saliva. Here we report on recurrent rearrangements [t(4;9)(q13;q31)] in AciCC that translocate active enhancer regions from the SCPP gene cluster to the region upstream of Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 4 Group A Member 3 (NR4A3) at 9q31. We show that NR4A3 is specifically upregulated in AciCCs, and that active chromatin regions and gene expression signatures in AciCCs are highly correlated with the NR4A3 transcription factor binding motif. Overexpression of NR4A3 in mouse salivary gland cells increases expression of known NR4A3 target genes and has a stimulatory functional effect on cell proliferation. We conclude that NR4A3 is upregulated through enhancer hijacking and has important oncogenic functions in AciCC.
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