Summary
Follicular lymphoma (FL) is an indolent disease, but 30-40% of cases undergo
histologic transformation to an aggressive malignancy, typically represented by diffuse
large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The pathogenesis of this process remains largely unknown.
Using whole-exome sequencing and copy-number analysis, here we show that the dominant
clone of FL and transformed FL (tFL) arise by divergent evolution from a common mutated
precursor through the acquisition of distinct genetic events. Mutations in epigenetic
modifiers and anti-apoptotic genes are introduced early in the common precursor, while tFL
is specifically associated with alterations deregulating cell-cycle progression and
DNA-damage responses (CDKN2A/B, MYC, TP53), as well as with aberrant
somatic hypermutation. The genomic profile of tFL shares similarities with that of
germinal center B-cell-type de novo DLBCL, but also displays unique
combinations of altered genes, with diagnostic and therapeutic implications.
Summary
A systematic characterization of the genetic alterations driving ALCLs has not been performed. By integrating massive sequencing strategies, we provide a comprehensive characterization of driver genetic alterations (somatic point mutations, copy number alterations, and gene fusions) in ALK− ALCLs. We identified activating mutations of JAK1 and/or STAT3 genes in ∼20% of 155 ALK− ALCLs and demonstrated that 38% of systemic ALK− ALCLs displayed double lesions. Recurrent chimeras combining a transcription factor (NFkB2 or NCOR2) with a tyrosine kinase (ROS1 or TYK2) were also discovered in WT JAK1/STAT3 ALK− ALCL. All these aberrations lead to the constitutive activation of the JAK/STAT3 pathway, which was proved oncogenic. Consistently, JAK/STAT3 pathway inhibition impaired cell growth in vitro and in vivo.
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