Dimitri Livitz
Broad Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dimitri Livitz.
Nature Genetics | 2017
Paz Polak; Jaegil Kim; Lior Z. Braunstein; Rosa Karlic; Nicholas J Haradhavala; Grace Tiao; Daniel Rosebrock; Dimitri Livitz; Kirsten Kübler; Kent W. Mouw; Atanas Kamburov; Yosef E. Maruvka; Ignaty Leshchiner; Eric S. Lander; Todd R. Golub; Aviad Zick; Alexandre Orthwein; Michael S. Lawrence; R.N. Batra; Carlos Caldas; Daniel A. Haber; Peter W. Laird; Hui Shen; Leif W. Ellisen; Alan D. D'Andrea; Stephen J. Chanock; William D. Foulkes; Gad Getz
Biallelic inactivation of BRCA1 or BRCA2 is associated with a pattern of genome-wide mutations known as signature 3. By analyzing ∼1,000 breast cancer samples, we confirmed this association and established that germline nonsense and frameshift variants in PALB2, but not in ATM or CHEK2, can also give rise to the same signature. We were able to accurately classify missense BRCA1 or BRCA2 variants known to impair homologous recombination (HR) on the basis of this signature. Finally, we show that epigenetic silencing of RAD51C and BRCA1 by promoter methylation is strongly associated with signature 3 and, in our data set, was highly enriched in basal-like breast cancers in young individuals of African descent.
Nature Communications | 2017
Moshe Sade-Feldman; Yunxin J. Jiao; Jonathan H. Chen; Michael S. Rooney; Michal Barzily-Rokni; Jean-Pierre Eliane; Stacey L. Bjorgaard; Marc R. Hammond; Hans Vitzthum; Shauna M. Blackmon; Dennie T. Frederick; Mehlika Hazar-Rethinam; Brandon Nadres; Emily E. Van Seventer; Sachet A. Shukla; Keren Yizhak; John P. Ray; Daniel Rosebrock; Dimitri Livitz; Viktor A. Adalsteinsson; Gad Getz; Lyn M. Duncan; Bo Li; Ryan B. Corcoran; Donald P. Lawrence; Anat Stemmer-Rachamimov; Genevieve M. Boland; Dan A. Landau; Keith T. Flaherty; Ryan J. Sullivan
Treatment with immune checkpoint blockade (CPB) therapies often leads to prolonged responses in patients with metastatic melanoma, but the common mechanisms of primary and acquired resistance to these agents remain incompletely characterized and have yet to be validated in large cohorts. By analyzing longitudinal tumor biopsies from 17 metastatic melanoma patients treated with CPB therapies, we observed point mutations, deletions or loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in beta-2-microglobulin (B2M), an essential component of MHC class I antigen presentation, in 29.4% of patients with progressing disease. In two independent cohorts of melanoma patients treated with anti-CTLA4 and anti-PD1, respectively, we find that B2M LOH is enriched threefold in non-responders (~30%) compared to responders (~10%) and associated with poorer overall survival. Loss of both copies of B2M is found only in non-responders. B2M loss is likely a common mechanism of resistance to therapies targeting CTLA4 or PD1.Resistance to immune-checkpoint blockade often occurs in treated patients. Here, the authors demonstrate that B2M loss is a mechanism of primary and acquired resistance to therapies targeting CTLA4 or PD-1 in melanoma patients.
Nature Communications | 2017
Viktor A. Adalsteinsson; Gavin Ha; Samuel S. Freeman; Atish D. Choudhury; Daniel G. Stover; Heather A. Parsons; Gregory Gydush; Sarah C. Reed; Denisse Rotem; Justin Rhoades; Denis Loginov; Dimitri Livitz; Daniel Rosebrock; Ignaty Leshchiner; Jaegil Kim; Chip Stewart; Mara Rosenberg; Joshua M. Francis; Cheng-Zhong Zhang; Ofir Cohen; Coyin Oh; Huiming Ding; Paz Polak; Max Lloyd; Sairah Mahmud; Karla Helvie; Margaret S. Merrill; Rebecca A. Santiago; Edward P. O’Connor; Seong Ho Jeong
Whole-exome sequencing of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) could enable comprehensive profiling of tumors from blood but the genome-wide concordance between cfDNA and tumor biopsies is uncertain. Here we report ichorCNA, software that quantifies tumor content in cfDNA from 0.1× coverage whole-genome sequencing data without prior knowledge of tumor mutations. We apply ichorCNA to 1439 blood samples from 520 patients with metastatic prostate or breast cancers. In the earliest tested sample for each patient, 34% of patients have ≥10% tumor-derived cfDNA, sufficient for standard coverage whole-exome sequencing. Using whole-exome sequencing, we validate the concordance of clonal somatic mutations (88%), copy number alterations (80%), mutational signatures, and neoantigens between cfDNA and matched tumor biopsies from 41 patients with ≥10% cfDNA tumor content. In summary, we provide methods to identify patients eligible for comprehensive cfDNA profiling, revealing its applicability to many patients, and demonstrate high concordance of cfDNA and metastatic tumor whole-exome sequencing.Identifying the mutational landscape of tumours from cell-free DNA in the blood could help diagnostics in cancer. Here, the authors present ichorCNA, software that quantifies tumour content in cell free DNA, and they demonstrate that cell-free DNA whole-exome sequencing is concordant with metastatic tumour whole-exome sequencing.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Bjoern Chapuy; Chip Stewart; Andrew Dunford; Jaegil Kim; Atanas Kamburov; Robert Redd; Michael S. Lawrence; Margaretha G. M. Roemer; Amy Li; Marita Ziepert; Annette M. Staiger; Jeremiah Wala; Matthew Ducar; Ignaty Leshchiner; Ester Rheinbay; Amaro Taylor-Weiner; Caroline A. Coughlin; Julian Hess; Chandra S. Pedamallu; Dimitri Livitz; Daniel Rosebrock; Mara Rosenberg; Adam Tracy; Heike Horn; Paul Van Hummelen; Andrew L. Feldman; Brian K. Link; Anne J. Novak; James R. Cerhan; Thomas M. Habermann
Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the most common lymphoid malignancy in adults, is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disease that is further classified into transcriptionally defined activated B cell (ABC) and germinal center B cell (GCB) subtypes. We carried out a comprehensive genetic analysis of 304 primary DLBCLs and identified low-frequency alterations, captured recurrent mutations, somatic copy number alterations, and structural variants, and defined coordinate signatures in patients with available outcome data. We integrated these genetic drivers using consensus clustering and identified five robust DLBCL subsets, including a previously unrecognized group of low-risk ABC-DLBCLs of extrafollicular/marginal zone origin; two distinct subsets of GCB-DLBCLs with different outcomes and targetable alterations; and an ABC/GCB-independent group with biallelic inactivation of TP53, CDKN2A loss, and associated genomic instability. The genetic features of the newly characterized subsets, their mutational signatures, and the temporal ordering of identified alterations provide new insights into DLBCL pathogenesis. The coordinate genetic signatures also predict outcome independent of the clinical International Prognostic Index and suggest new combination treatment strategies. More broadly, our results provide a roadmap for an actionable DLBCL classification.Comprehensive integration of mutational and structural alterations in clinically-annotated DLBCL patient samples provides a novel molecular classification of the disease.
bioRxiv | 2017
Moritz Gerstung; Clemency Jolly; Ignaty Leshchiner; Stefan Dentro; Santiago Gonzalez; Thomas J. Mitchell; Yulia Rubanova; Pavana Anur; Daniel Rosebrock; Kaixan Yu; Maxime Tarabichi; Amit G Deshwar; Jeff Wintersinger; Kortine Kleinheinz; Ignacio Vázquez-García; Kerstin Haase; Subhajit Sengupta; Geoff Macintyre; Salem Malikic; Nilgun Donmez; Dimitri Livitz; Marek Cmero; Jonas Demeulemeester; Steve Schumacher; Yu Fan; Xiaotong Yao; Juhee Lee; Matthias Schlesner; Paul C. Boutros; David Bowtell
Cancer develops through a process of somatic evolution. Here, we use whole-genome sequencing of 2,778 tumour samples from 2,658 donors to reconstruct the life history, evolution of mutational processes, and driver mutation sequences of 39 cancer types. The early phases of oncogenesis are driven by point mutations in a small set of driver genes, often including biallelic inactivation of tumour suppressors. Early oncogenesis is also characterised by specific copy number gains, such as trisomy 7 in glioblastoma or isochromosome 17q in medulloblastoma. By contrast, increased genomic instability, a nearly four-fold diversification of driver genes, and an acceleration of point mutation processes are features of later stages. Copy-number alterations often occur in mitotic crises leading to simultaneous gains of multiple chromosomal segments. Timing analysis suggests that driver mutations often precede diagnosis by many years, and in some cases decades, providing a window of opportunity for early cancer detection.
Nature Communications | 2017
Dan A. Landau; Clare Sun; Daniel Rosebrock; Sarah E. M. Herman; Joshua Fein; Mariela Sivina; Chingiz Underbayev; Delong Liu; Julia Hoellenriegel; Sarangan Ravichandran; Mohammed Farooqui; Wandi Zhang; Carrie Cibulskis; Asaf Zviran; Donna Neuberg; Dimitri Livitz; Ivana Bozic; Ignaty Leshchiner; Gad Getz; Jan A. Burger; Adrian Wiestner; Catherine J. Wu
Treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) has shifted from chemo-immunotherapy to targeted agents. To define the evolutionary dynamics induced by targeted therapy in CLL, we perform serial exome and transcriptome sequencing for 61 ibrutinib-treated CLLs. Here, we report clonal shifts (change >0.1 in clonal cancer cell fraction, Q < 0.1) in 31% of patients during the first year of therapy, associated with adverse outcome. We also observe transcriptional downregulation of pathways mediating energy metabolism, cell cycle, and B cell receptor signaling. Known and previously undescribed mutations in BTK and PLCG2, or uncommonly, other candidate alterations are present in seventeen subjects at the time of progression. Thus, the frequently observed clonal shifts during the early treatment period and its potential association with adverse outcome may reflect greater evolutionary capacity, heralding the emergence of drug-resistant clones.In a subset of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) treated with targeted agents, such as ibrutinib, drug resistant subclones emerge. Here, the authors report on transcriptional changes in CLL patients treated with ibrutinib and identify early clonal shifts associated with evolution of resistant clones.
Nature Communications | 2018
Nicholas J. Haradhvala; J. Kim; Yosef E. Maruvka; Paz Polak; Daniel Rosebrock; Dimitri Livitz; Julian Hess; Ignaty Leshchiner; Atanas Kamburov; Kent W. Mouw; Michael S. Lawrence; Gad Getz
Fidelity of DNA replication is maintained using polymerase proofreading and the mismatch repair pathway. Tumors with loss of function of either mechanism have elevated mutation rates with characteristic mutational signatures. Here we report that tumors with concurrent loss of both polymerase proofreading and mismatch repair function have mutational patterns that are not a simple sum of the signatures of the individual alterations, but correspond to distinct, previously unexplained signatures: COSMIC database signatures 14 and 20. We then demonstrate that in all five cases in which the chronological order of events could be determined, polymerase epsilon proofreading alterations precede the defect in mismatch repair. Overall, we illustrate that multiple distinct mutational signatures can result from different combinations of a smaller number of mutational processes (of either damage or repair), which can influence the interpretation and discovery of mutational signatures.Polymerase proofreading and the mismatch repair pathway maintain the fidelity of DNA replication. Here the authors show that tumors with concurrent loss of function of both pathways lead to mutation signatures that are not simply a sum of the signatures found in tumors involving single alteration.
npj Precision Oncology | 2017
Priscilla K. Brastianos; Naema Nayyar; Daniel Rosebrock; Ignaty Leshchiner; Corey M. Gill; Dimitri Livitz; Mia S. Bertalan; Megan D’Andrea; Kaitlin Hoang; Elisa Aquilanti; Ugonma Chukwueke; Andrew Kaneb; Andrew S. Chi; Scott R. Plotkin; Elizabeth R. Gerstner; Mathew P. Frosch; Mario L. Suvà; Daniel P. Cahill; Gad Getz; Tracy T. Batchelor
Glioblastomas are malignant neoplasms composed of diverse cell populations. This intratumoral diversity has an underlying architecture, with a hierarchical relationship through clonal evolution from a common ancestor. Therapies are limited by emergence of resistant subclones from this phylogenetic reservoir. To characterize this clonal ancestral origin of recurrent tumors, we determined phylogenetic relationships using whole exome sequencing of pre-treatment IDH1/2 wild-type glioblastoma specimens, matched to post-treatment autopsy samples (n = 9) and metastatic extracranial post-treatment autopsy samples (n = 3). We identified “truncal” genetic events common to the evolutionary ancestry of the initial specimen and later recurrences, thereby inferring the identity of the precursor cell population. Mutations were identified in a subset of cases in known glioblastoma genes such as NF1(n = 3), TP53(n = 4) and EGFR(n = 5). However, by phylogenetic analysis, there were no protein-coding mutations as recurrent truncal events across the majority of cases. In contrast, whole copy-loss of chromosome 10 (12 of 12 cases), copy-loss of chromosome 9p21 (11 of 12 cases) and copy-gain in chromosome 7 (10 of 12 cases) were identified as shared events in the majority of cases. Strikingly, mutations in the TERT promoter were also identified as shared events in all evaluated pairs (9 of 9). Thus, we define four truncal non-coding genomic alterations that represent early genomic events in gliomagenesis, that identify the persistent cellular reservoir from which glioblastoma recurrences emerge. Therapies to target these key early genomic events are needed. These findings offer an evolutionary explanation for why precision therapies that target protein-coding mutations lack efficacy in GBM.Brain cancer: Non-coding genomic changes fuel glioblastoma growthNon-coding and structural alterations may be early drivers of brain cancer development. A team led by Priscilla Brastianos and Tracy Batchelor from Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA, analyzed the genetic landscape of glioblastoma by comparing pre-treatment and autopsy tumor specimens from 12 patients who died of the aggressive brain cancer. They identified a common set of four genetic events that occurred early in the evolution of nearly every patient’s cancer: three losses or gains of chromosome regions or entire chromosomes, and mutations in the gene-activating promoter of TERT, which encodes an enzyme implicated in the cancer’s growth. The findings help explain why therapies that target protein-coding mutations don’t work in brain cancer when they do in other tumor types. They also point to new drug targets.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Bjoern Chapuy; Chip Stewart; Andrew Dunford; Jaegil Kim; Atanas Kamburov; Robert Redd; Michael S. Lawrence; Margaretha G. M. Roemer; Amy Li; Marita Ziepert; Annette M. Staiger; Jeremiah Wala; Matthew Ducar; Ignaty Leshchiner; Ester Rheinbay; Amaro Taylor-Weiner; Caroline A. Coughlin; Julian Hess; Chandra S. Pedamallu; Dimitri Livitz; Daniel Rosebrock; Mara Rosenberg; Adam Tracy; Heike Horn; Paul Van Hummelen; Andrew L. Feldman; Brian K. Link; Anne J. Novak; James R. Cerhan; Thomas M. Habermann
In the version of this article originally published, an asterisk was omitted from Fig. 1a. The asterisk has been added to the figure. Additionally, a “NOTCH2” label was erroneously included in Fig. 4a. The label has been removed. The errors have been corrected in the PDF and HTML versions of this article.
bioRxiv | 2017
Justin P. Whalley; Ivo Buchhalter; Esther Rheinbay; Keiran Raine; Kortine Kleinheinz; Miranda D. Stobbe; Johannes Werner; Sergi Beltran; Marta Gut; Daniel Huebschmann; Barbara Hutter; Dimitri Livitz; M. Perry; Mara Rosenberg; Gordon Saksena; Jean-Rémi Trotta; Roland Eils; Jan O. Korbel; Daniela S. Gerhard; Peter J. Campbell; Gad Getz; Matthias Schlesner; Ivo Gut; PCAWG-Tech; Pcawg-Qc
Working with cancer whole genomes sequenced over a period of many years in different sequencing centres requires a validated framework to compare the quality of these sequences. The Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC), a project a cohort of over 2800 donors provided us with the challenge of assessing the quality of the genome sequences. A non-redundant set of five quality control (QC) measurements were assembled and used to establish a star rating system. These QC measures reflect known differences in sequencing protocol and provide a guide to downstream analyses of these whole genome sequences. The resulting QC measures also allowed for exclusion samples of poor quality, providing researchers within PCAWG, and when the data is released for other researchers, a good idea of the sequencing quality. For a researcher wishing to apply the QC measures for their data we provide a Docker Container of the software used to calculate them. We believe that this is an effective framework of quality measures for whole genome, cancer sequences, which will be a useful addition to analytical pipelines, as it has to the PCAWG project.