AML with complex karyotype: extreme genomic complexity revealed by combined long-read sequencing and Hi-C technology

Autor/innen

  • M.K. Klever
  • E. Sträng
  • S. Hetzel
  • J. Jungnitsch
  • A. Dolnik
  • R. Schöpflin
  • J.F.F. Schrezenmeier
  • F. Schick
  • O. Blau
  • J. Westermann
  • F.G. Rücker
  • Z. Xia
  • K. Döhner
  • H. Schrezenmeier
  • M. Spielmann
  • A. Meissner
  • U.S. Melo
  • S. Mundlos
  • L. Bullinger

Journal

  • Blood Advances

Quellenangabe

  • Blood Adv 7 (21): 6520-6531

Zusammenfassung

  • Acute myeloid leukemia with complex karyotype (CK-AML) is associated with poor prognosis, which is only in part explained by underlying TP53 mutations. Especially in the presence of complex chromosomal rearrangements, such as chromothripsis, the outcome of CK-AML is dismal. However, this degree of complexity of genomic rearrangements contributes to the leukemogenic phenotype and treatment resistance of CK-AML remains largely unknown. Applying an integrative workflow for the detection of structural variants (SVs) based on Oxford Nanopore (ONT) genomic DNA long-read sequencing (gDNA-LRS) and high-throughput chromosome confirmation capture (Hi-C) in a well-defined cohort of CK-AML identified regions with an extreme density of SVs. These rearrangements consisted to a large degree of focal amplifications enriched in the proximity of mammalian-wide interspersed repeat (MIR) elements, which often result in oncogenic fusion transcripts, such as USP7::MVD, or the deregulation of oncogenic driver genes as confirmed by RNA-seq and ONT direct cDNA sequencing. We termed this novel phenomenon chromocataclysm. Thus, our integrative SV detection workflow combing gDNA-LRS and Hi-C enables to unravel complex genomic rearrangements at a very high resolution in regions hard to analyze by conventional sequencing technology, thereby providing an important tool to identify novel important drivers underlying cancer with complex karyotypic changes.


DOI

doi:10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010887