NF1 Gene Inactivation Acts as Tumor Driver in RET/RAS Negative Medullary Thyroid Carcinomas.
European Journal of Endocrinology 2023 May 23
OBJECTIVE: 20% of sporadic MTC has no RET/RAS somatic alterations or other known gene alterations. Aim of this study was to investigate RET/RAS negative MTC for the presence of NF1 alterations.
METHODS: we studied 18 sporadic RET/RAS negative MTC cases: Next generation sequencing of tumoral and blood DNA was performed using a custom panel including the entire coding region of the NF1 gene. The effect of NF1 alterations on the transcripts were characterized by RT-PCR and the loss of heterozygosity of the other NF1 allele was investigated with Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification.
RESULTS: Two cases showed bi-allelic inactivation of NF1 with a prevalence of about 11% of RET/RAS negative cases. In a patient affected by neurofibromatosis there was a somatic intronic point mutation determining the transcript alteration in one allele and a germline loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the other. In the other case described both the point mutation and the LOH were somatic events; this latter finding shows, for the first time, a driver role of NF1 inactivation in MTC independent of RET/RAS alterations and the presence of neurofibromatosis.
CONCLUSIONS: About 11% of our series of sporadic RET/RAS negative MTC harbor biallelic inactivation of NF1 suppressor gene also regardless neurofibromatosis status. According to our results, NF1 alterations should be searched in all RET/RAS negative MTC as possible driver. Moreover, this finding reduces the number of negative sporadic MTCs and may have important clinical implications in the management of these tumors.
METHODS: we studied 18 sporadic RET/RAS negative MTC cases: Next generation sequencing of tumoral and blood DNA was performed using a custom panel including the entire coding region of the NF1 gene. The effect of NF1 alterations on the transcripts were characterized by RT-PCR and the loss of heterozygosity of the other NF1 allele was investigated with Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification.
RESULTS: Two cases showed bi-allelic inactivation of NF1 with a prevalence of about 11% of RET/RAS negative cases. In a patient affected by neurofibromatosis there was a somatic intronic point mutation determining the transcript alteration in one allele and a germline loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the other. In the other case described both the point mutation and the LOH were somatic events; this latter finding shows, for the first time, a driver role of NF1 inactivation in MTC independent of RET/RAS alterations and the presence of neurofibromatosis.
CONCLUSIONS: About 11% of our series of sporadic RET/RAS negative MTC harbor biallelic inactivation of NF1 suppressor gene also regardless neurofibromatosis status. According to our results, NF1 alterations should be searched in all RET/RAS negative MTC as possible driver. Moreover, this finding reduces the number of negative sporadic MTCs and may have important clinical implications in the management of these tumors.
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