Recurrent inactivation of STAG2 in bladder cancer is not associated with aneuploidy

C Balbás-Martínez, A Sagrera… - Nature …, 2013 - nature.com
C Balbás-Martínez, A Sagrera, E Carrillo-de-Santa-Pau, J Earl, M Márquez, M Vazquez
Nature genetics, 2013nature.com
Urothelial bladder cancer (UBC) is heterogeneous at the clinical, pathological and genetic
levels. Tumor invasiveness (T) and grade (G) are the main factors associated with outcome
and determine patient management. A discovery exome sequencing screen (n= 17),
followed by a prevalence screen (n= 60), identified new genes mutated in this tumor coding
for proteins involved in chromatin modification (MLL2, ASXL2 and BPTF), cell division
(STAG2, SMC1A and SMC1B) and DNA repair (ATM, ERCC2 and FANCA). STAG2, a …
Abstract
Urothelial bladder cancer (UBC) is heterogeneous at the clinical, pathological and genetic levels. Tumor invasiveness (T) and grade (G) are the main factors associated with outcome and determine patient management. A discovery exome sequencing screen (n = 17), followed by a prevalence screen (n = 60), identified new genes mutated in this tumor coding for proteins involved in chromatin modification (MLL2, ASXL2 and BPTF), cell division (STAG2, SMC1A and SMC1B) and DNA repair (ATM, ERCC2 and FANCA). STAG2, a subunit of cohesin, was significantly and commonly mutated or lost in UBC, mainly in tumors of low stage or grade, and its loss was associated with improved outcome. Loss of expression was often observed in chromosomally stable tumors, and STAG2 knockdown in bladder cancer cells did not increase aneuploidy. STAG2 reintroduction in non-expressing cells led to reduced colony formation. Our findings indicate that STAG2 is a new UBC tumor suppressor acting through mechanisms that are different from its role in preventing aneuploidy.
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