Dang Danielle D, Rosenblum Jared S, Shah Ashish H, Zhuang Zhengping, Doucet-O'Hare Tara T
Neuro-Oncology Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Section of Virology and Immunotherapy, Department of Neurosurgery, Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Cancers (Basel). 2023 Apr 27;15(9):2511. doi: 10.3390/cancers15092511.
Originally approved in 1979, a specific grading classification for central nervous system (CNS) tumors was devised by the World Health Organization (WHO) in an effort to guide cancer treatment and better understand prognosis. These "blue books" have since undergone several iterations based on tumor location, advancements in histopathology, and most recently, diagnostic molecular pathology in its fifth edition. As new research methods have evolved to elucidate complex molecular mechanisms of tumorigenesis, a need to update and integrate these findings into the WHO grading scheme has become apparent. Epigenetic tools represent an area of burgeoning interest that encompasses all non-Mendelian inherited genetic features affecting gene expression, including but not limited to chromatin remodeling complexes, DNA methylation, and histone regulating enzymes. The SWItch/Sucrose non-fermenting (SWI/SNF) chromatin remodeling complex is the largest mammalian family of chromatin remodeling proteins and is estimated to be altered in 20-25% of all human malignancies; however, the ways in which it contributes to tumorigenesis are not fully understood. We recently discovered that CNS tumors with SWI/SNF mutations have revealed an oncogenic role for endogenous retroviruses (ERVs), remnants of exogenous retroviruses that integrated into the germline and are inherited like Mendelian genes, several of which retain open reading frames for proteins whose expression putatively contributes to tumor formation. Herein, we analyzed the latest WHO classification scheme for all CNS tumors with documented SWI/SNF mutations and/or aberrant ERV expression, and we summarize this information to highlight potential research opportunities that could be integrated into the grading scheme to better delineate diagnostic criteria and therapeutic targets.
世界卫生组织(WHO)于1979年首次批准了一种针对中枢神经系统(CNS)肿瘤的特定分级分类方法,旨在指导癌症治疗并更好地了解预后情况。此后,这些“蓝皮书”基于肿瘤位置、组织病理学进展,以及最近的第五版诊断分子病理学,历经了数次修订。随着新的研究方法不断发展以阐明肿瘤发生的复杂分子机制,将这些研究结果更新并整合到WHO分级方案中的需求变得愈发明显。表观遗传工具代表了一个新兴的研究领域,它涵盖了所有影响基因表达的非孟德尔遗传特征,包括但不限于染色质重塑复合物、DNA甲基化和组蛋白调节酶。SWItch/蔗糖非发酵(SWI/SNF)染色质重塑复合物是哺乳动物中最大的染色质重塑蛋白家族,据估计在所有人类恶性肿瘤中有20%-25%发生改变;然而,其促进肿瘤发生的方式尚未完全明确。我们最近发现,具有SWI/SNF突变的中枢神经系统肿瘤揭示了内源性逆转录病毒(ERVs)的致癌作用,ERVs是整合到种系中的外源性逆转录病毒的残余物,像孟德尔基因一样遗传,其中一些保留了蛋白质的开放阅读框,其表达可能有助于肿瘤形成。在此,我们分析了最新的WHO分类方案中所有记录有SWI/SNF突变和/或异常ERV表达的中枢神经系统肿瘤,并总结这些信息以突出潜在的研究机会,这些机会可整合到分级方案中,以更好地界定诊断标准和治疗靶点。