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Featured researches published by Uri Tabori.


Nature | 2012

Driver mutations in histone H3.3 and chromatin remodelling genes in paediatric glioblastoma

Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Andrey Korshunov; Xiao Yang Liu; David T. W. Jones; Elke Pfaff; Karine Jacob; Dominik Sturm; Adam M. Fontebasso; Dong Anh Khuong Quang; Martje Tönjes; Volker Hovestadt; Steffen Albrecht; Marcel Kool; André Nantel; Carolin Konermann; Anders M. Lindroth; Natalie Jäger; Tobias Rausch; Marina Ryzhova; Jan O. Korbel; Thomas Hielscher; Péter Hauser; Miklós Garami; Almos Klekner; László Bognár; Martin Ebinger; Martin U. Schuhmann; Wolfram Scheurlen; Arnulf Pekrun; Michael C. Frühwald

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a lethal brain tumour in adults and children. However, DNA copy number and gene expression signatures indicate differences between adult and paediatric cases. To explore the genetic events underlying this distinction, we sequenced the exomes of 48 paediatric GBM samples. Somatic mutations in the H3.3-ATRX-DAXX chromatin remodelling pathway were identified in 44% of tumours (21/48). Recurrent mutations in H3F3A, which encodes the replication-independent histone 3 variant H3.3, were observed in 31% of tumours, and led to amino acid substitutions at two critical positions within the histone tail (K27M, G34R/G34V) involved in key regulatory post-translational modifications. Mutations in ATRX (α-thalassaemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked) and DAXX (death-domain associated protein), encoding two subunits of a chromatin remodelling complex required for H3.3 incorporation at pericentric heterochromatin and telomeres, were identified in 31% of samples overall, and in 100% of tumours harbouring a G34R or G34V H3.3 mutation. Somatic TP53 mutations were identified in 54% of all cases, and in 86% of samples with H3F3A and/or ATRX mutations. Screening of a large cohort of gliomas of various grades and histologies (n = 784) showed H3F3A mutations to be specific to GBM and highly prevalent in children and young adults. Furthermore, the presence of H3F3A/ATRX-DAXX/TP53 mutations was strongly associated with alternative lengthening of telomeres and specific gene expression profiles. This is, to our knowledge, the first report to highlight recurrent mutations in a regulatory histone in humans, and our data suggest that defects of the chromatin architecture underlie paediatric and young adult GBM pathogenesis.


Cancer Cell | 2011

Delineation of two clinically and molecularly distinct subgroups of posterior fossa ependymoma.

Hendrik Witt; Stephen C. Mack; Marina Ryzhova; Sebastian Bender; Martin Sill; Ruth Isserlin; Axel Benner; Thomas Hielscher; Till Milde; Marc Remke; David T. W. Jones; Paul A. Northcott; Livia Garzia; Kelsey C. Bertrand; Andrea Wittmann; Yuan Yao; Stephen S. Roberts; Luca Massimi; Tim Van Meter; William A. Weiss; Nalin Gupta; Wiesia Grajkowska; Boleslaw Lach; Yoon-Jae Cho; Andreas von Deimling; Andreas E. Kulozik; Olaf Witt; Gary D. Bader; Cynthia Hawkins; Uri Tabori

Despite the histological similarity of ependymomas from throughout the neuroaxis, the disease likely comprises multiple independent entities, each with a distinct molecular pathogenesis. Transcriptional profiling of two large independent cohorts of ependymoma reveals the existence of two demographically, transcriptionally, genetically, and clinically distinct groups of posterior fossa (PF) ependymomas. Group A patients are younger, have laterally located tumors with a balanced genome, and are much more likely to exhibit recurrence, metastasis at recurrence, and death compared with Group B patients. Identification and optimization of immunohistochemical (IHC) markers for PF ependymoma subgroups allowed validation of our findings on a third independent cohort, using a human ependymoma tissue microarray, and provides a tool for prospective prognostication and stratification of PF ependymoma patients.


Nature | 2014

Epigenomic alterations define lethal CIMP-positive ependymomas of infancy.

Stephen C. Mack; Hendrik Witt; Rosario M. Piro; Lei Gu; Scott Zuyderduyn; A. M. Stütz; Xiaosong Wang; Marco Gallo; Livia Garzia; Kory Zayne; Xiaoyang Zhang; Vijay Ramaswamy; Natalie Jäger; David T. W. Jones; Martin Sill; Trevor J. Pugh; M. Ryzhova; Khalida Wani; David Shih; Renee Head; Marc Remke; S. D. Bailey; Thomas Zichner; Claudia C. Faria; Mark Barszczyk; Sebastian Stark; Huriye Seker-Cin; Sonja Hutter; Pascal Johann; Sebastian Bender

Ependymomas are common childhood brain tumours that occur throughout the nervous system, but are most common in the paediatric hindbrain. Current standard therapy comprises surgery and radiation, but not cytotoxic chemotherapy as it does not further increase survival. Whole-genome and whole-exome sequencing of 47 hindbrain ependymomas reveals an extremely low mutation rate, and zero significant recurrent somatic single nucleotide variants. Although devoid of recurrent single nucleotide variants and focal copy number aberrations, poor-prognosis hindbrain ependymomas exhibit a CpG island methylator phenotype. Transcriptional silencing driven by CpG methylation converges exclusively on targets of the Polycomb repressive complex 2 which represses expression of differentiation genes through trimethylation of H3K27. CpG island methylator phenotype-positive hindbrain ependymomas are responsive to clinical drugs that target either DNA or H3K27 methylation both in vitro and in vivo. We conclude that epigenetic modifiers are the first rational therapeutic candidates for this deadly malignancy, which is epigenetically deregulated but genetically bland.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Genomic analysis of diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas identifies three molecular subgroups and recurrent activating ACVR1 mutations

Pawel Buczkowicz; Christine M. Hoeman; Patricia Rakopoulos; Sanja Pajovic; Louis Letourneau; Misko Dzamba; Andrew Morrison; Peter W. Lewis; Eric Bouffet; Ute Bartels; Jennifer Zuccaro; Sameer Agnihotri; Scott Ryall; Mark Barszczyk; Yevgen Chornenkyy; Mathieu Bourgey; Guillaume Bourque; Alexandre Montpetit; Francisco Cordero; Pedro Castelo-Branco; Joshua Mangerel; Uri Tabori; King Ching Ho; Annie Huang; Kathryn R. Taylor; Alan Mackay; Javad Nazarian; Jason Fangusaro; Matthias A. Karajannis; David Zagzag

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a fatal brain cancer that arises in the brainstem of children, with no effective treatment and near 100% fatality. The failure of most therapies can be attributed to the delicate location of these tumors and to the selection of therapies on the basis of assumptions that DIPGs are molecularly similar to adult disease. Recent studies have unraveled the unique genetic makeup of this brain cancer, with nearly 80% found to harbor a p.Lys27Met histone H3.3 or p.Lys27Met histone H3.1 alteration. However, DIPGs are still thought of as one disease, with limited understanding of the genetic drivers of these tumors. To understand what drives DIPGs, we integrated whole-genome sequencing with methylation, expression and copy number profiling, discovering that DIPGs comprise three molecularly distinct subgroups (H3-K27M, silent and MYCN) and uncovering a new recurrent activating mutation affecting the activin receptor gene ACVR1 in 20% of DIPGs. Mutations in ACVR1 were constitutively activating, leading to SMAD phosphorylation and increased expression of the downstream activin signaling targets ID1 and ID2. Our results highlight distinct molecular subgroups and novel therapeutic targets for this incurable pediatric cancer.


Lancet Oncology | 2011

Biochemical and imaging surveillance in germline TP53 mutation carriers with Li-Fraumeni syndrome: a prospective observational study

Anita Villani; Uri Tabori; Joshua D. Schiffman; Adam Shlien; Joseph Beyene; Harriet Druker; Ana Novokmet; Jonathan L. Finlay; David Malkin

BACKGROUND Individuals with Li-Fraumeni syndrome have a high lifetime risk of developing cancer. We assessed the feasibility and potential clinical effect of a comprehensive surveillance protocol in asymptomatic TP53 mutation carriers in families with this syndrome. METHODS We implemented a clinical surveillance protocol, using frequent biochemical and imaging studies, for asymptomatic TP53 mutation carriers on Jan 1, 2004, and did a prospective observational study of members of eight families with Li-Fraumeni syndrome who either chose to undergo surveillance or chose not to undergo surveillance. The primary outcome measure was detection of new cancers. The secondary outcome measure was overall survival. FINDINGS As of Nov 1, 2010, 33 TP53 mutation carriers were identified, 18 of whom underwent surveillance. The surveillance protocol detected ten asymptomatic tumours in seven patients, including small, high-grade tumours and low-grade or premalignant tumours. All seven mutation carriers were alive after a median follow-up of 24 months (IQR 22-65 months). 12 high-grade, high-stage tumours developed in 10 individuals in the non-surveillance group, two of whom (20%) were alive at the end of follow-up (p=0·0417 for comparison with survival in the surveillance group). 3-year overall survival was 100% in the surveillance group and 21% (95% CI 4-48%) in the non-surveillance group (p=0·0155). INTERPRETATION Our findings show the feasibility of a clinical surveillance protocol for the detection of asymptomatic neoplasms in individuals with germline TP53 mutations. This strategy offers a management option for affected individuals, and its benefits lend support to the use of early genetic testing of at-risk individuals and families. FUNDING Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, SickKids Foundation, and Soccer for Hope.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

Immune Checkpoint Inhibition for Hypermutant Glioblastoma Multiforme Resulting From Germline Biallelic Mismatch Repair Deficiency

Eric Bouffet; Valerie Larouche; Brittany Campbell; Daniele Merico; Richard de Borja; Melyssa Aronson; Carol Durno; Joerg Krueger; Vanja Cabric; Vijay Ramaswamy; Nataliya Zhukova; Gary Mason; Roula Farah; Samina Afzal; Michal Yalon; Gideon Rechavi; Vanan Magimairajan; Michael F. Walsh; Shlomi Constantini; Rina Dvir; Ronit Elhasid; Alyssa T. Reddy; Michael Osborn; Michael Sullivan; Jordan R. Hansford; Andrew J. Dodgshun; Nancy Klauber-Demore; Lindsay L. Peterson; Sunil J. Patel; Scott M. Lindhorst

PURPOSE Recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is incurable with current therapies. Biallelic mismatch repair deficiency (bMMRD) is a highly penetrant childhood cancer syndrome often resulting in GBM characterized by a high mutational burden. Evidence suggests that high mutation and neoantigen loads are associated with response to immune checkpoint inhibition. PATIENTS AND METHODS We performed exome sequencing and neoantigen prediction on 37 bMMRD cancers and compared them with childhood and adult brain neoplasms. Neoantigen prediction bMMRD GBM was compared with responsive adult cancers from multiple tissues. Two siblings with recurrent multifocal bMMRD GBM were treated with the immune checkpoint inhibitor nivolumab. RESULTS All malignant tumors (n = 32) were hypermutant. Although bMMRD brain tumors had the highest mutational load because of secondary polymerase mutations (mean, 17,740 ± standard deviation, 7,703), all other high-grade tumors were hypermutant (mean, 1,589 ± standard deviation, 1,043), similar to other cancers that responded favorably to immune checkpoint inhibitors. bMMRD GBM had a significantly higher mutational load than sporadic pediatric and adult gliomas and all other brain tumors (P < .001). bMMRD GBM harbored mean neoantigen loads seven to 16 times higher than those in immunoresponsive melanomas, lung cancers, or microsatellite-unstable GI cancers (P < .001). On the basis of these preclinical data, we treated two bMMRD siblings with recurrent multifocal GBM with the anti-programmed death-1 inhibitor nivolumab, which resulted in clinically significant responses and a profound radiologic response. CONCLUSION This report of initial and durable responses of recurrent GBM to immune checkpoint inhibition may have implications for GBM in general and other hypermutant cancers arising from primary (genetic predisposition) or secondary MMRD.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Excessive genomic DNA copy number variation in the Li-Fraumeni cancer predisposition syndrome

Adam Shlien; Uri Tabori; Christian R. Marshall; Malgorzata Pienkowska; Lars Feuk; Ana Novokmet; Sonia Nanda; Harriet Druker; Stephen W. Scherer; David Malkin

DNA copy number variations (CNVs) are a significant and ubiquitous source of inherited human genetic variation. However, the importance of CNVs to cancer susceptibility and tumor progression has not yet been explored. Li–Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) is an autosomal dominantly inherited disorder characterized by a strikingly increased risk of early-onset breast cancer, sarcomas, brain tumors and other neoplasms in individuals harboring germline TP53 mutations. Known genetic determinants of LFS do not fully explain the variable clinical phenotype in affected family members. As part of a wider study of CNVs and cancer, we conducted a genome-wide profile of germline CNVs in LFS families. Here, by examining DNA from a large healthy population and an LFS cohort using high-density oligonucleotide arrays, we show that the number of CNVs per genome is well conserved in the healthy population, but strikingly enriched in these cancer-prone individuals. We found a highly significant increase in CNVs among carriers of germline TP53 mutations with a familial cancer history. Furthermore, we identified a remarkable number of genomic regions in which known cancer-related genes coincide with CNVs, in both LFS families and healthy individuals. Germline CNVs may provide a foundation that enables the more dramatic chromosomal changes characteristic of TP53-related tumors to be established. Our results suggest that screening families predisposed to cancer for CNVs may identify individuals with an abnormally high number of these events.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

Subgroup-Specific Prognostic Implications of TP53 Mutation in Medulloblastoma

Nataliya Zhukova; Vijay Ramaswamy; Marc Remke; Elke Pfaff; David Shih; Dianna Martin; Pedro Castelo-Branco; Berivan Baskin; Peter N. Ray; Eric Bouffet; André O. von Bueren; David Jones; Paul A. Northcott; Marcel Kool; Dominik Sturm; Trevor J. Pugh; Scott L. Pomeroy; Yoon-Jae Cho; Torsten Pietsch; Marco Gessi; Stefan Rutkowski; László Bognár; Almos Klekner; Byung Kyu Cho; Seung Ki Kim; Kyu Chang Wang; Charles G. Eberhart; Michelle Fèvre-Montange; Maryam Fouladi; Pim J. French

PURPOSE Reports detailing the prognostic impact of TP53 mutations in medulloblastoma offer conflicting conclusions. We resolve this issue through the inclusion of molecular subgroup profiles. PATIENTS AND METHODS We determined subgroup affiliation, TP53 mutation status, and clinical outcome in a discovery cohort of 397 medulloblastomas. We subsequently validated our results on an independent cohort of 156 medulloblastomas. RESULTS TP53 mutations are enriched in wingless (WNT; 16%) and sonic hedgehog (SHH; 21%) medulloblastomas and are virtually absent in subgroups 3 and 4 tumors (P < .001). Patients with SHH/TP53 mutant tumors are almost exclusively between ages 5 and 18 years, dramatically different from the general SHH distribution (P < .001). Children with SHH/TP53 mutant tumors harbor 56% germline TP53 mutations, which are not observed in children with WNT/TP53 mutant tumors. Five-year overall survival (OS; ± SE) was 41% ± 9% and 81% ± 5% for patients with SHH medulloblastomas with and without TP53 mutations, respectively (P < .001). Furthermore, TP53 mutations accounted for 72% of deaths in children older than 5 years with SHH medulloblastomas. In contrast, 5-year OS rates were 90% ± 9% and 97% ± 3% for patients with WNT tumors with and without TP53 mutations (P = .21). Multivariate analysis revealed that TP53 status was the most important risk factor for SHH medulloblastoma. Survival rates in the validation cohort mimicked the discovery results, revealing that poor survival of TP53 mutations is restricted to patients with SHH medulloblastomas (P = .012) and not WNT tumors. CONCLUSION Subgroup-specific analysis reconciles prior conflicting publications and confirms that TP53 mutations are enriched among SHH medulloblastomas, in which they portend poor outcome and account for a large proportion of treatment failures in these patients.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Combined hereditary and somatic mutations of replication error repair genes result in rapid onset of ultra-hypermutated cancers

Adam Shlien; Brittany Campbell; Richard de Borja; Ludmil B. Alexandrov; Daniele Merico; David C. Wedge; Peter Van Loo; Patrick Tarpey; Paul Coupland; Sam Behjati; Aaron Pollett; Tatiana Lipman; Abolfazl Heidari; Shriya Deshmukh; Naama Avitzur; Bettina Meier; Moritz Gerstung; Ye Hong; Diana Merino; Manasa Ramakrishna; Marc Remke; Roland Arnold; Gagan B. Panigrahi; Neha P. Thakkar; Karl P Hodel; Erin E. Henninger; A. Yasemin Göksenin; Doua Bakry; George S. Charames; Harriet Druker

DNA replication−associated mutations are repaired by two components: polymerase proofreading and mismatch repair. The mutation consequences of disruption to both repair components in humans are not well studied. We sequenced cancer genomes from children with inherited biallelic mismatch repair deficiency (bMMRD). High-grade bMMRD brain tumors exhibited massive numbers of substitution mutations (>250/Mb), which was greater than all childhood and most cancers (>7,000 analyzed). All ultra-hypermutated bMMRD cancers acquired early somatic driver mutations in DNA polymerase ɛ or δ. The ensuing mutation signatures and numbers are unique and diagnostic of childhood germ-line bMMRD (P < 10−13). Sequential tumor biopsy analysis revealed that bMMRD/polymerase-mutant cancers rapidly amass an excess of simultaneous mutations (∼600 mutations/cell division), reaching but not exceeding ∼20,000 exonic mutations in <6 months. This implies a threshold compatible with cancer-cell survival. We suggest a new mechanism of cancer progression in which mutations develop in a rapid burst after ablation of replication repair.


Lancet Oncology | 2013

Recurrence patterns across medulloblastoma subgroups: an integrated clinical and molecular analysis

Vijay Ramaswamy; Marc Remke; Eric Bouffet; Claudia C. Faria; Sébastien Perreault; Yoon-Jae Cho; David Shih; Betty Luu; Adrian Dubuc; Paul A. Northcott; Ulrich Schüller; Sridharan Gururangan; Roger E. McLendon; Darell D. Bigner; Maryam Fouladi; Keith L. Ligon; Scott L. Pomeroy; Sandra E. Dunn; Joanna Triscott; Nada Jabado; Adam M. Fontebasso; David T. W. Jones; Marcel Kool; Matthias A. Karajannis; Sharon Gardner; David Zagzag; Sofia Nunes; José Pimentel; Jaume Mora; Eric Lipp

BACKGROUND Recurrent medulloblastoma is a therapeutic challenge because it is almost always fatal. Studies have confirmed that medulloblastoma consists of at least four distinct subgroups. We sought to delineate subgroup-specific differences in medulloblastoma recurrence patterns. METHODS We retrospectively identified a discovery cohort of all recurrent medulloblastomas at the Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto, ON, Canada) from 1994 to 2012 (cohort 1), and established molecular subgroups using a nanoString-based assay on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues or frozen tissue. The anatomical site of recurrence (local tumour bed or leptomeningeal metastasis), time to recurrence, and survival after recurrence were assessed in a subgroup-specific manner. Two independent, non-overlapping cohorts (cohort 2: samples from patients with recurrent medulloblastomas from 13 centres worldwide, obtained between 1991 and 2012; cohort 3: samples from patients with recurrent medulloblastoma obtained at the NN Burdenko Neurosurgical Institute [Moscow, Russia] between 1994 and 2011) were analysed to confirm and validate observations. When possible, molecular subgrouping was done on tissue obtained from both the initial surgery and at recurrence. RESULTS Cohort 1 consisted of 30 patients with recurrent medulloblastomas; nine with local recurrences, and 21 with metastatic recurrences. Cohort 2 consisted of 77 patients and cohort 3 of 96 patients with recurrent medulloblastoma. Subgroup affiliation remained stable at recurrence in all 34 cases with available matched primary and recurrent pairs (five pairs from cohort 1 and 29 pairs from cohort 2 [15 SHH, five group 3, 14 group 4]). This finding was validated in 17 pairs from cohort 3. When analysed in a subgroup-specific manner, local recurrences in cohort 1 were more frequent in SHH tumours (eight of nine [89%]) and metastatic recurrences were more common in group 3 and group 4 tumours (17 of 20 [85%] with one WNT, p=0·0014, local vs metastatic recurrence, SHH vs group 3 vs group 4). The subgroup-specific location of recurrence was confirmed in cohort 2 (p=0·0013 for local vs metastatic recurrence, SHH vs group 3 vs group 4,), and cohort 3 (p<0·0001). Treatment with craniospinal irradiation at diagnosis was not significantly associated with the anatomical pattern of recurrence. Survival after recurrence was significantly longer in patients with group 4 tumours in cohort 1 (p=0·013) than with other subgroups, which was confirmed in cohort 2 (p=0·0075), but not cohort 3 (p=0·70). INTERPRETATION Medulloblastoma does not change subgroup at the time of recurrence, reinforcing the stability of the four main medulloblastoma subgroups. Significant differences in the location and timing of recurrence across medulloblastoma subgroups have potential treatment ramifications. Specifically, intensified local (posterior fossa) therapy should be tested in the initial treatment of patients with SHH tumours. Refinement of therapy for patients with group 3 or group 4 tumours should focus on metastases.

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