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Featured researches published by Riku Katainen.


Science | 2011

MED12, the Mediator Complex Subunit 12 Gene, Is Mutated at High Frequency in Uterine Leiomyomas

Netta Mäkinen; Miika Mehine; Jaana Tolvanen; Eevi Kaasinen; Yilong Li; Heli J. Lehtonen; Massimiliano Gentile; Jian Yan; Martin Enge; Minna Taipale; Mervi Aavikko; Riku Katainen; Elina Virolainen; Tom Böhling; Taru A. Koski; Virpi Launonen; Jari Sjöberg; Jussi Taipale; Pia Vahteristo; Lauri A. Aaltonen

Uterine fibroids frequently harbor mutations in a specific gene that has been implicated in transcriptional regulation. Uterine leiomyomas, or fibroids, are benign tumors that affect millions of women worldwide and that can cause considerable morbidity. To study the genetic basis of this tumor type, we examined 18 uterine leiomyomas derived from 17 different patients by exome sequencing and identified tumor-specific mutations in the mediator complex subunit 12 (MED12) gene in 10. Through analysis of 207 additional tumors, we determined that MED12 is altered in 70% (159 of 225) of tumors from a total of 80 patients. The Mediator complex is a 26-subunit transcriptional regulator that bridges DNA regulatory sequences to the RNA polymerase II initiation complex. All mutations resided in exon 2, suggesting that aberrant function of this region of MED12 contributes to tumorigenesis.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013

Characterization of Uterine Leiomyomas by Whole-Genome Sequencing

Miika Mehine; Eevi Kaasinen; Netta Mäkinen; Riku Katainen; Kati Kämpjärvi; Esa Pitkänen; Hanna-Riikka Heinonen; Ralf Bützow; Outi Kilpivaara; Anna Kuosmanen; Heikki Ristolainen; Massimiliano Gentile; Jari Sjöberg; Pia Vahteristo; Lauri A. Aaltonen

BACKGROUND Uterine leiomyomas are benign but affect the health of millions of women. A better understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved may provide clues to the prevention and treatment of these lesions. METHODS We performed whole-genome sequencing and gene-expression profiling of 38 uterine leiomyomas and the corresponding myometrium from 30 women. RESULTS Identical variants observed in some separate tumor nodules suggested that these nodules have a common origin. Complex chromosomal rearrangements resembling chromothripsis were a common feature of leiomyomas. These rearrangements are best explained by a single event of multiple chromosomal breaks and random reassembly. The rearrangements created tissue-specific changes consistent with a role in the initiation of leiomyoma, such as translocations of the HMGA2 and RAD51B loci and aberrations at the COL4A5-COL4A6 locus, and occurred in the presence of normal TP53 alleles. In some cases, separate events had occurred more than once in single tumor-cell lineages. CONCLUSIONS Chromosome shattering and reassembly resembling chromothripsis (a single genomic event that results in focal losses and rearrangements in multiple genomic regions) is a major cause of chromosomal abnormalities in uterine leiomyomas; we propose that tumorigenesis occurs when tissue-specific tumor-promoting changes are formed through these events. Chromothripsis has previously been associated with aggressive cancer; its common occurrence in leiomyomas suggests that it also has a role in the genesis and progression of benign tumors. We observed that multiple separate tumors could be seeded from a single lineage of uterine leiomyoma cells. (Funded by the Academy of Finland Center of Excellence program and others.).


Nature Genetics | 2015

CTCF/cohesin-binding sites are frequently mutated in cancer

Riku Katainen; Kashyap Dave; Esa Pitkänen; Kimmo Palin; Teemu Kivioja; Niko Välimäki; Alexandra E. Gylfe; Heikki Ristolainen; Ulrika A. Hänninen; Tatiana Cajuso; Johanna Kondelin; Tomas Tanskanen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Heikki Järvinen; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Anna Lepistö; Eevi Kaasinen; Outi Kilpivaara; Sari Tuupanen; Martin Enge; Jussi Taipale; Lauri A. Aaltonen

Cohesin is present in almost all active enhancer regions, where it is associated with transcription factors. Cohesin frequently colocalizes with CTCF (CCCTC-binding factor), affecting genomic stability, expression and epigenetic homeostasis. Cohesin subunits are mutated in cancer, but CTCF/cohesin-binding sites (CBSs) in DNA have not been examined for mutations. Here we report frequent mutations at CBSs in cancers displaying a mutational signature where mutations in A•T base pairs predominate. Integration of whole-genome sequencing data from 213 colorectal cancer (CRC) samples and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-exo) data identified frequent point mutations at CBSs. In contrast, CRCs showing an ultramutator phenotype caused by defects in the exonuclease domain of DNA polymerase ɛ (POLE) displayed significantly fewer mutations at and adjacent to CBSs. Analysis of public data showed that multiple cancer types accumulate CBS mutations. CBSs are a major mutational hotspot in the noncoding cancer genome.


Blood | 2015

Autoimmunity, hypogammaglobulinemia, lymphoproliferation, and mycobacterial disease in patients with activating mutations in STAT3

Haapaniemi Em; Meri Kaustio; Hanna Rajala; van Adrichem Aj; Leena Kainulainen; Glumoff; Rainer Döffinger; Heikki Kuusanmäki; Tarja Heiskanen-Kosma; Luca Trotta; Samuel C. Chiang; Petri Kulmala; Samuli Eldfors; Riku Katainen; Sanna Siitonen; Marja-Liisa Karjalainen-Lindsberg; Panu E. Kovanen; Otonkoski T; Kimmo Porkka; Heiskanen K; Arno Hänninen; Yenan T. Bryceson; Uusitalo-Seppälä R; Jani Saarela; Mikko Seppänen; Satu Mustjoki; Juha Kere

The signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) family of transcription factors orchestrate hematopoietic cell differentiation. Recently, mutations in STAT1, STAT5B, and STAT3 have been linked to development of immunodysregulation polyendocrinopathy enteropathy X-linked-like syndrome. Here, we immunologically characterized 3 patients with de novo activating mutations in the DNA binding or dimerization domains of STAT3 (p.K392R, p.M394T, and p.K658N, respectively). The patients displayed multiorgan autoimmunity, lymphoproliferation, and delayed-onset mycobacterial disease. Immunologically, we noted hypogammaglobulinemia with terminal B-cell maturation arrest, dendritic cell deficiency, peripheral eosinopenia, increased double-negative (CD4(-)CD8(-)) T cells, and decreased natural killer, T helper 17, and regulatory T-cell numbers. Notably, the patient harboring the K392R mutation developed T-cell large granular lymphocytic leukemia at age 14 years. Our results broaden the spectrum of phenotypes caused by activating STAT3 mutations, highlight the role of STAT3 in the development and differentiation of multiple immune cell lineages, and strengthen the link between the STAT family of transcription factors and autoimmunity.


Nature Communications | 2014

The Glanville fritillary genome retains an ancient karyotype and reveals selective chromosomal fusions in Lepidoptera

Virpi Ahola; Rainer Lehtonen; Panu Somervuo; Leena Salmela; Patrik Koskinen; Pasi Rastas; Niko Välimäki; Lars Paulin; Jouni Kvist; Niklas Wahlberg; Jaakko Tanskanen; Emily A. Hornett; Laura Ferguson; Shiqi Luo; Zijuan Cao; Maaike de Jong; Anne Duplouy; Olli-Pekka Smolander; Heiko Vogel; Rajiv C. McCoy; Kui Qian; Wong Swee Chong; Qin Zhang; Freed Ahmad; Jani K. Haukka; Aruj Joshi; Jarkko Salojärvi; Christopher W. Wheat; Ewald Grosse-Wilde; Daniel C. Hughes

Previous studies have reported that chromosome synteny in Lepidoptera has been well conserved, yet the number of haploid chromosomes varies widely from 5 to 223. Here we report the genome (393 Mb) of the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia; Nymphalidae), a widely recognized model species in metapopulation biology and eco-evolutionary research, which has the putative ancestral karyotype of n=31. Using a phylogenetic analyses of Nymphalidae and of other Lepidoptera, combined with orthologue-level comparisons of chromosomes, we conclude that the ancestral lepidopteran karyotype has been n=31 for at least 140 My. We show that fusion chromosomes have retained the ancestral chromosome segments and very few rearrangements have occurred across the fusion sites. The same, shortest ancestral chromosomes have independently participated in fusion events in species with smaller karyotypes. The short chromosomes have higher rearrangement rate than long ones. These characteristics highlight distinctive features of the evolutionary dynamics of butterflies and moths.


International Journal of Cancer | 2014

Exome sequencing reveals frequent inactivating mutations in ARID1A, ARID1B, ARID2 and ARID4A in microsatellite unstable colorectal cancer

Tatiana Cajuso; Ulrika A. Hänninen; Johanna Kondelin; Alexandra E. Gylfe; Tomas Tanskanen; Riku Katainen; Esa Pitkänen; Heikki Ristolainen; Eevi Kaasinen; Minna Taipale; Jussi Taipale; Jan Böhm; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Heikki Järvinen; Sari Tuupanen; Outi Kilpivaara; Pia Vahteristo

ARID1A has been identified as a novel tumor suppressor gene in ovarian cancer and subsequently in various other tumor types. ARID1A belongs to the ARID domain containing gene family, which comprises of 15 genes involved, for example, in transcriptional regulation, proliferation and chromatin remodeling. In this study, we used exome sequencing data to analyze the mutation frequency of all the ARID domain containing genes in 25 microsatellite unstable (MSI) colorectal cancers (CRCs) as a first systematic effort to characterize the mutation pattern of the whole ARID gene family. Genes which fulfilled the selection criteria in this discovery set (mutations in at least 4/25 [16%] samples, including at least one nonsense or splice site mutation) were chosen for further analysis in an independent validation set of 21 MSI CRCs. We found that in addition to ARID1A, which was mutated in 39% of the tumors (18/46), also ARID1B (13%, 6/46), ARID2 (13%, 6/46) and ARID4A (20%, 9/46) were frequently mutated. In all these genes, the mutations were distributed along the entire length of the gene, thus distinguishing them from typical MSI target genes previously described. Our results indicate that in addition to ARID1A, other members of the ARID gene family may play a role in MSI CRC.


The Journal of Pathology | 2007

Systematic search for the best gene expression markers for melanoma micrometastasis detection

J Soikkeli; M Lukk; Pirjo Nummela; Susanna Virolainen; Tiina Jahkola; Riku Katainen; L Harju; Esko Ukkonen; Olli Saksela; Erkki Hölttä

Melanoma is notorious for its high tendency to metastasize and its refractoriness to treatment thereafter. Metastasis is believed to occur mostly through the lymphatic system, and the status of sentinel lymph nodes is currently recognized as the best prognostic indicator. Unfortunately, the lymphatic metastatic process is still poorly understood and the occurrence of sentinel node metastases (micrometastases) may be underestimated. We performed genome‐wide gene expression analyses of melanoma lymph node micrometastases and macrometastases, and of primary melanomas and benign naevi, to characterize the early metastatic cells molecularly and to disclose the best diagnostic markers and rational targets for therapy. Significance analysis of microarrays identified 22 over‐ and five under‐expressed genes with ≥ four‐fold changes in the micrometastases. Of these genes, MLANA, TYR, MIA, ERBB3, PRAME, and SPP1 were tested as potential markers by RT‐PCR and immunohistochemistry. In a prospective study of 160 patients, our graded MLANA and TYR RT‐PCR analyses disclosed clinically significant metastases, as assessed by disease recurrence, better than histological and immunohistochemical examinations. These results strongly suggest the clinical implementation of quantifiable RT‐PCR assays to confirm and complement the pathological examination of sentinel node metastases. Furthermore, SPP1 and PRAME proved valuable as melanoma‐specific markers capable of differentiating melanoma cells from benign naevi in the sentinel lymph nodes. Importantly, these two genes may also prove to be ideal targets for drug development and therapy. Most molecular traits of the micrometastases were already present in the primary tumours, suggesting that micrometastasis to sentinel lymph nodes is a fairly non‐selective process. Copyright


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Eleven Candidate Susceptibility Genes for Common Familial Colorectal Cancer

Alexandra E. Gylfe; Riku Katainen; Johanna Kondelin; Tomas Tanskanen; Tatiana Cajuso; Ulrika A. Hänninen; Jussi Taipale; Minna Taipale; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Heikki Järvinen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Outi Kilpivaara; Esa Pitkänen; Pia Vahteristo; Sari Tuupanen; Auli Karhu; Lauri A. Aaltonen

Hereditary factors are presumed to play a role in one third of colorectal cancer (CRC) cases. However, in the majority of familial CRC cases the genetic basis of predisposition remains unexplained. This is particularly true for families with few affected individuals. To identify susceptibility genes for this common phenotype, we examined familial cases derived from a consecutive series of 1514 Finnish CRC patients. Ninety-six familial CRC patients with no previous diagnosis of a hereditary CRC syndrome were included in the analysis. Eighty-six patients had one affected first-degree relative, and ten patients had two or more. Exome sequencing was utilized to search for genes harboring putative loss-of-function variants, because such alterations are likely candidates for disease-causing mutations. Eleven genes with rare truncating variants in two or three familial CRC cases were identified: UACA, SFXN4, TWSG1, PSPH, NUDT7, ZNF490, PRSS37, CCDC18, PRADC1, MRPL3, and AKR1C4. Loss of heterozygosity was examined in all respective cancer samples, and was detected in seven occasions involving four of the candidate genes. In all seven occasions the wild-type allele was lost (P = 0.0078) providing additional evidence that these eleven genes are likely to include true culprits. The study provides a set of candidate predisposition genes which may explain a subset of common familial CRC. Additional genetic validation in other populations is required to provide firm evidence for causality, as well as to characterize the natural history of the respective phenotypes.


British Journal of Cancer | 2014

Identification of 33 candidate oncogenes by screening for base-specific mutations.

Sari Tuupanen; Ulrika A. Hänninen; Johanna Kondelin; P von Nandelstadh; Tatiana Cajuso; Alexandra E. Gylfe; Riku Katainen; Tomas Tanskanen; Heikki Ristolainen; Jan Böhm; J-P Mecklin; Heikki Järvinen; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; C L Andersen; Minna Taipale; Jussi Taipale; Pia Vahteristo; Kaisa Lehti; Esa Pitkänen; Lauri A. Aaltonen

Background:Genes with recurrent codon-specific somatic mutations are likely drivers of tumorigenesis and potential therapeutic targets. Hypermutable cancers may represent a sensitive system for generation and selection of oncogenic mutations.Methods:We utilised exome-sequencing data on 25 sporadic microsatellite-instable (MSI) colorectal cancers (CRCs) and searched for base-specific somatic mutation hotspots.Results:We identified novel mutation hotspots in 33 genes. Fourteen genes displayed mutations in the validation set of 254 MSI CRCs: ANTXR1, MORC2, CEP135, CRYBB1, GALNT9, KRT82, PI15, SLC36A1, CNTF, GLDC, MBTPS1, OR9Q2, R3HDM1 and TTPAL. A database search found examples of the hotspot mutations in multiple cancer types.Conclusions:This work reveals a variety of new recurrent candidate oncogene mutations to be further scrutinised as potential therapeutic targets.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

Clonally related uterine leiomyomas are common and display branched tumor evolution

Miika Mehine; Hanna-Riikka Heinonen; Nanna Sarvilinna; Esa Pitkänen; Netta Mäkinen; Riku Katainen; Sari Tuupanen; Ralf Bützow; Jari Sjöberg; Lauri A. Aaltonen

Uterine leiomyomas are extremely frequent benign smooth muscle tumors often presenting as multiple concurrent lesions and causing symptoms such as abnormal menstrual bleeding, abdominal pain and infertility. While most leiomyomas are believed to arise independently, a few studies have encountered separate lesions harboring identical genetic changes, suggesting a common clonal origin. To investigate the frequency of clonally related leiomyomas, genome-wide tools need to be utilized, and thus little is known about this phenomenon. Using MED12 sequencing and SNP arrays, we searched for clonally related uterine leiomyomas in a set of 103 tumors from 14 consecutive patients who entered hysterectomy owing to symptomatic lesions. Whole-genome sequencing was also utilized to study the genomic architecture of clonally related tumors. This revealed four patients to have two or more tumors that were clonally related, all of which lacked MED12 mutations. Furthermore, some tumors were composed of genetically distinct subclones, indicating a nonlinear, branched model of tumor evolution. DEPDC5 was discovered as a novel tumor suppressor gene playing a role in the progression of uterine leiomyomas. Perhaps counterintuitively—considering Knudsons two-hit hypothesis—a large shared deletion was followed by different truncating DEPDC5 mutations in four clonally related leiomyomas. This study provides insight into the intratumor heterogeneity of these tumors and suggests that a shared clonal origin is a common feature of leiomyomas that do not carry an MED12 mutation. These observations also offer one explanation to the common occurrence of multiple concurrent lesions.

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Jukka-Pekka Mecklin

University of Eastern Finland

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Kimmo Palin

University of Helsinki

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