TY - JOUR
T1 - Gain of chromosome 17 is an early genetic abnormality in neuroblastoma with PPM1D emerging as a strong candidate oncogene driving tumor progression
AU - Milosevic, Jelena
AU - Fransson, Susanne
AU - Svensson, Johanna
AU - Otte, Jörg
AU - Olsen, Thale K
AU - Sveinbjornsson, Baldur
AU - Hertwig, Falk
AU - Bartenhagen, Christoph
AU - Abel, Frida
AU - Reinsbach, Susanne E
AU - Djos, Anna
AU - Javanmardi, Niloufar
AU - Shi, Yao
AU - Hehir-Kwa, Jane Y
AU - Mensenkamp, Arjen
AU - Tytgat, Godelieve Am
AU - Holmberg, Johan
AU - Molenaar, Jan J
AU - Jongmans, Marjolijn
AU - Fischer, Matthias
AU - Baryawno, Ninib
AU - Gisselsson, David
AU - Martinsson, Tommy
AU - Kogner, Per
AU - Johnsen, John Inge
N1 - Copyright © 2025. Published by Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/10
Y1 - 2025/10
N2 - Segmental gain of chromosome 17q is the most common genetic aberration in high-risk neuroblastoma, but its role in disease progression is poorly understood. This study aims to address the contribution of 17q gain to neuroblastoma malignancy. We analyzed the genetic and transcriptional landscape of 417 neuroblastoma patients across various risk groups and clinical stages using multi-omic approaches. Single-cell RNA/DNA sequencing and SNP arrays were combined to characterize genomic aberrations, while evolutionary trajectories were mapped to explore the accumulation of genetic changes in patients with neuroblastoma. Additionally, DNA and RNA sequencing were used to assess mutational burden and gene expression patterns. Our findings suggest that chromosome 17 gain is an early genetic event acquired during neuroblastoma development, correlating with the accumulation of additional chromosomal aberrations and poor prognosis. Increased segmental gains of chromosome 17q were observed during clonal evolution, relapse disease and metastasis. We identified PPM1D, a p53-inducible Ser/Thr phosphatase located on chr17q22.3, as a key player activated by segmental 17q-gain, gene-fusion, or gain-of-function somatic and germline mutations, further promoting neuroblastoma development/progression. Gain of chromosome 17 is an early driver of genetic instability in neuroblastoma, with PPM1D emerging as a potential candidate gene implicated in high-risk disease progression.
AB - Segmental gain of chromosome 17q is the most common genetic aberration in high-risk neuroblastoma, but its role in disease progression is poorly understood. This study aims to address the contribution of 17q gain to neuroblastoma malignancy. We analyzed the genetic and transcriptional landscape of 417 neuroblastoma patients across various risk groups and clinical stages using multi-omic approaches. Single-cell RNA/DNA sequencing and SNP arrays were combined to characterize genomic aberrations, while evolutionary trajectories were mapped to explore the accumulation of genetic changes in patients with neuroblastoma. Additionally, DNA and RNA sequencing were used to assess mutational burden and gene expression patterns. Our findings suggest that chromosome 17 gain is an early genetic event acquired during neuroblastoma development, correlating with the accumulation of additional chromosomal aberrations and poor prognosis. Increased segmental gains of chromosome 17q were observed during clonal evolution, relapse disease and metastasis. We identified PPM1D, a p53-inducible Ser/Thr phosphatase located on chr17q22.3, as a key player activated by segmental 17q-gain, gene-fusion, or gain-of-function somatic and germline mutations, further promoting neuroblastoma development/progression. Gain of chromosome 17 is an early driver of genetic instability in neuroblastoma, with PPM1D emerging as a potential candidate gene implicated in high-risk disease progression.
KW - Humans
KW - Neuroblastoma/genetics
KW - Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17/genetics
KW - Disease Progression
KW - Protein Phosphatase 2C/genetics
KW - Chromosome Aberrations
KW - Oncogenes
KW - Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic
KW - Male
KW - Female
KW - Infant
KW - Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
KW - Prognosis
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/33eb0637-bef0-31c8-98e2-8f10d611c88a/
U2 - 10.1016/j.canlet.2025.217769
DO - 10.1016/j.canlet.2025.217769
M3 - Article
C2 - 40320038
SN - 0304-3835
VL - 625
SP - 217769
JO - Cancer letters
JF - Cancer letters
ER -