Publication:
The modular network structure of the mutational landscape of Acute Myeloid Leukemia.

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2018-10-10

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Ibáñez, Mariam
Carbonell-Caballero, José
Such, Esperanza
García-Alonso, Luz
Liquori, Alessandro
López-Pavía, María
Llop, Marta
Alonso, Carmen
Barragán, Eva
Gómez-Seguí, Inés

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Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is associated with the sequential accumulation of acquired genetic alterations. Although at diagnosis cytogenetic alterations are frequent in AML, roughly 50% of patients present an apparently normal karyotype (NK), leading to a highly heterogeneous prognosis. Due to this significant heterogeneity, it has been suggested that different molecular mechanisms may trigger the disease with diverse prognostic implications. We performed whole-exome sequencing (WES) of tumor-normal matched samples of de novo AML-NK patients lacking mutations in NPM1, CEBPA or FLT3-ITD to identify new gene mutations with potential prognostic and therapeutic relevance to patients with AML. Novel candidate-genes, together with others previously described, were targeted resequenced in an independent cohort of 100 de novo AML patients classified in the cytogenetic intermediate-risk (IR) category. A mean of 4.89 mutations per sample were detected in 73 genes, 35 of which were mutated in more than one patient. After a network enrichment analysis, we defined a single in silico model and established a set of seed-genes that may trigger leukemogenesis in patients with normal karyotype. The high heterogeneity of gene mutations observed in AML patients suggested that a specific alteration could not be as essential as the interaction of deregulated pathways.

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Adult
Aged
Cytodiagnosis
Female
Gene Regulatory Networks
Genetic Association Studies
Genetic Heterogeneity
Humans
Karyotype
Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute
Male
Middle Aged
Mutation
Neoplasm Proteins
Nucleophosmin
Prognosis
Exome Sequencing

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