Functional genomic landscape of acute myeloid leukaemia

JW Tyner, CE Tognon, D Bottomly, B Wilmot, SE Kurtz… - Nature, 2018 - nature.com
JW Tyner, CE Tognon, D Bottomly, B Wilmot, SE Kurtz, SL Savage, N Long, AR Schultz
Nature, 2018nature.com
The implementation of targeted therapies for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) has been
challenging because of the complex mutational patterns within and across patients as well
as a dearth of pharmacologic agents for most mutational events. Here we report initial
findings from the Beat AML programme on a cohort of 672 tumour specimens collected from
562 patients. We assessed these specimens using whole-exome sequencing, RNA
sequencing and analyses of ex vivo drug sensitivity. Our data reveal mutational events that …
Abstract
The implementation of targeted therapies for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) has been challenging because of the complex mutational patterns within and across patients as well as a dearth of pharmacologic agents for most mutational events. Here we report initial findings from the Beat AML programme on a cohort of 672 tumour specimens collected from 562 patients. We assessed these specimens using whole-exome sequencing, RNA sequencing and analyses of ex vivo drug sensitivity. Our data reveal mutational events that have not previously been detected in AML. We show that the response to drugs is associated with mutational status, including instances of drug sensitivity that are specific to combinatorial mutational events. Integration with RNA sequencing also revealed gene expression signatures, which predict a role for specific gene networks in the drug response. Collectively, we have generated a dataset—accessible through the Beat AML data viewer (Vizome)—that can be leveraged to address clinical, genomic, transcriptomic and functional analyses of the biology of AML.
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