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Heterogeneity and chronology of PTEN deletion and ERG fusion in prostate cancer
Author(s) -
Antje Krohn,
Fabian Freudenthaler,
Silvia Harasimowicz,
Martina Kluth,
Sarah Fuchs,
Lia Burkhardt,
Phillip Stahl,
Maria Christina Tsourlakis,
Melanie Bauer,
Pierre Tennstedt,
Markus Graefen,
Stefan Steurer,
Hueseyin Sirma,
Guido Sauter,
Thorsten Schlomm,
Ronald Simon,
Sarah Minner
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
modern pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.596
H-Index - 153
eISSN - 1530-0285
pISSN - 0893-3952
DOI - 10.1038/modpathol.2014.70
Subject(s) - pten , tensin , erg , cancer research , tmprss2 , biology , prostate cancer , fusion gene , tissue microarray , prostate , cancer , pathology , gene , medicine , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , genetics , apoptosis , retina , disease , covid-19 , neuroscience , infectious disease (medical specialty)
TMPRSS2:ERG fusions, in combination with deletion of the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) tumor suppressor, have been suggested to cooperatively drive tumor progression in prostate cancer. We utilized a novel heterogeneity tissue microarray containing samples from 10 different tumor blocks of 189 prostatectomy specimens to study heterogeneity of genomic PTEN alterations in individual foci. PTEN alterations were found in 48/123 (39%) analyzable individual tumor foci, including 40 foci with deletions, 7 with deletion and rearrangement, and 1 focus with rearrangement only. PTEN was homogeneously aberrant in only 4 (8%) and heterogeneously in 44 (92%) of the foci. We found a specific sequence of molecular events from PTEN breakage followed by deletion of DNA sequences flanking the breakpoint, resulting in homozygous deletion. The observation that 16 of 19 foci with homogeneous ERG positivity had focal PTEN alterations but none of 10 foci with PTEN alterations had focal ERG positivity (P<0.0001) suggests that PTEN alterations typically develop subsequent to ERG fusions. We demonstrate a high level of intratumoral heterogeneity of PTEN alterations with deletions and rearrangements that challenges potential PTEN routine diagnosis testing in biopsies. The observation that PTEN alterations develop subsequent to ERG fusion strongly suggests that ERG expression may directly drive development of PTEN aberrations.

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