Wilms tumour is an embryonal tumour of childhood that closely resembles the developing kidney. Genomic changes responsible for the development of the majority of Wilms tumours remain largely unknown. Here we identify recurrent mutations within Wilms tumours that involve the highly conserved YEATS domain of MLLT1 (ENL), a gene known to be involved in transcriptional elongation during early development. The mutant MLLT1 protein shows altered binding to acetylated histone tails. Moreover, MLLT1-mutant tumours show an increase in MYC gene expression and HOX dysregulation. Patients with MLLT1-mutant tumours present at a younger age and have a high prevalence of precursor intralobar nephrogenic rests. These data support a model whereby activating MLLT1 mutations early in renal development result in the development of Wilms tumour. Wilms tumour is a rare renal neoplasm that primarily affects children but the genomic changes responsible for its development are currently largely unknown. In this study, the authors identify somatic mutations of the MLLT1gene that are potentially involved in the aetiology of a subset of Wilms tumours.
MLLT1 YEATS domain mutations in clinically distinctive Favourable Histology Wilms tumours
E. Perlman,S. Gadd,S. Arold,A. Radhakrishnan,D. Gerhard,L. Jennings,V. Huff,Jaime M Guidry Auvil,Tanja Davidsen,J. Dome,D. Meerzaman,C. Hsu,Cu Nguyen,James R. Anderson,Yussanne Ma,A. Mungall,Richard A. Moore,M. Marra,C. Mullighan,Jing Ma,D. Wheeler,O. Hampton,J. Gastier-Foster,Nicole Ross,Malcolm A. Smith
Published 2015 in Nature Communications
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- Publication year
2015
- Venue
Nature Communications
- Publication date
2015-12-04
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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