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Recurrent mutation of the ID3 gene in Burkitt lymphoma identified by integrated genome, exome and transcriptome sequencing
ISSN
1061-4036
Date Issued
2012
Author(s)
Richter, Julia
Schlesner, Matthias
Hoffmann, Steve
Kreuz, Markus
Leich, Ellen
Burkhardt, Birgit
Rosolowski, Maciej
Ammerpohl, Ole
Wagener, Rabea
Bernhart, Stephan H.
Lenze, Dido
Szczepanowski, Monika
Paulsen, Maren
Lipinski, Simone
Russell, Robert B.
Adam-Klages, Sabine
Apic, Gordana
Claviez, Alexander
Hasenclever, Dirk
Hovestadt, Volker
Hornig, Nadine
Korbel, Jan O.
Langenberger, David
Lawerenz, Chris
Lisfeld, Jasmin
Meyer, Katharina
Picelli, Simone
Pischimarov, Jordan
Radlwimmer, Bernhard
Rausch, Tobias
Rohde, Marius
Schilhabel, Markus
Scholtysik, Rene
Spang, Rainer
Trautmann, Heiko
Zenz, Thorsten
Borkhardt, Arndt
Drexler, Hans G.
Moeller, Peter
MacLeod, Roderick A. F.
Pott, Christiane
Schreiber, Stefan
Loeffler, Markus
Stadler, Peter F.
Lichter, Peter
Eils, Roland
Kueppers, Ralf
Hummel, Michael
Klapper, Wolfram
Rosenstiel, Philip
Rosenwald, Andreas
Brors, Benedikt
Siebert, Reiner
DOI
10.1038/ng.2469
Abstract
Burkitt lymphoma is a mature aggressive B-cell lymphoma derived from germinal center B cells(1). Its cytogenetic hallmark is the Burkitt translocation t(8;14)(q24;q32) and its variants, which juxtapose the MYC oncogene with one of the three immunoglobulin loci(2). Consequently, MYC is deregulated, resulting in massive perturbation of gene expression(3). Nevertheless, MYC deregulation alone seems not to be sufficient to drive Burkitt lymphomagenesis. By whole-genome, whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of four prototypical Burkitt lymphomas with immunoglobulin gene (IG)-MYC translocation, we identified seven recurrently mutated genes. One of these genes, ID3, mapped to a region of focal homozygous loss in Burkitt lymphoma(4). In an extended cohort, 36 of 53 molecularly defined Burkitt lymphomas (68%) carried potentially damaging mutations of ID3. These were strongly enriched at somatic hypermutation motifs. Only 6 of 47 other B-cell lymphomas with the IG-MYC translocation (13%) carried ID3 mutations. These findings suggest that cooperation between ID3 inactivation and IG-MYC translocation is a hallmark of Burkitt lymphomagenesis.