AI Article Synopsis

  • Melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy (MNTI) is very rare, mainly found in the head and neck, with this case being the first in the fibula and only the eighth instance of occurrence in an extremity.
  • A 2-month-old girl presented with a fibula mass; thorough testing revealed no mutations but identified a loss of function mutation in the CDKN2A gene, along with chromosomal translocations and gene fusions that may deregulate tumor-related microRNA genes.
  • The findings suggest that MNTI's aggressive form in infants could stem from a genetic mutation combined with tumor-promoting gene fusions and epigenetic changes, highlighting the limited understanding of this rare tumor type

Article Abstract

Background: Melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy (MNTI) is exceptionally rare and occurs predominantly in the head and neck (92.8 % cases). The patient reported here is only the eighth case of MNTI presenting in an extremity, and the first reported in the fibula.

Case Presentation: A 2-month-old female presented with a mass arising in the fibula. Exhaustive genomic, transcriptomic, epigenetic and pathological characterization was performed on the excised primary tumor and a derived cell line. Whole-exome analysis of genomic DNA from both the tumor and blood indicated no somatic, non-synonymous coding mutations within the tumor, but a heterozygous, unique germline, loss of function mutation in CDKN2A (p16(INK4A), D74A). SNP-array CGH on DNA samples revealed the tumor to be euploid, with no detectable gene copy number variants. Multiple chromosomal translocations were identified by RNA-Seq, and fusion genes included RPLP1-C19MC, potentially deregulating the C19MC cluster, an imprinted locus containing microRNA genes reactivated by gene fusion in embryonal tumors with multilayered rosettes. Since the presumed cell of origin of MNTI is from the neural crest, we also compared gene expression with a dataset from human neural crest cells and identified 185 genes with significantly different expression. Consistent with the melanotic phenotype of the tumor, elevated expression of tyrosinase was observed. Other highly expressed genes encoded muscle proteins and modulators of the extracellular matrix. A derived MNTI cell line was sensitive to inhibitors of lysine demethylase, but not to compounds targeting other epigenetic regulators.

Conclusions: In the absence of somatic copy number variations or mutations, the fully transformed phenotype of the MNTI may have arisen in infancy because of the combined effects of a germline CDKN2A mutation, tumor promoting somatic fusion genes and epigenetic deregulation. Very little is known about the etiology of MNTI and this report advances knowledge of these rare tumors by providing the first comprehensive genomic, transcriptomic and epigenetic characterization of a case.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4983003PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-016-2669-3DOI Listing

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