AI Article Synopsis

  • Sarcomatoid dedifferentiation occurs in various renal cell carcinoma subtypes, including chromophobe RCC, leading to more aggressive disease and resistance to treatments, but increased response to immunotherapy.
  • Research on ChRCC reveals that it can dedifferentiate into sarcomatoid, anaplastic, and glandular forms, which are all linked to enhanced aggressiveness and metastasis.
  • Key mutations, like those in TP53 and PTEN, drive this dedifferentiation process, and specific genetic and molecular markers could help classify and diagnose these aggressive tumors more effectively.

Article Abstract

Sarcomatoid dedifferentiation is common to multiple renal cell carcinoma (RCC) subtypes, including chromophobe RCC (ChRCC), and is associated with increased aggressiveness, resistance to targeted therapies, and heightened sensitivity to immunotherapy. To study ChRCC dedifferentiation, we performed multiregion integrated paired pathological and genomic analyses. Interestingly, ChRCC dedifferentiates not only into sarcomatoid but also into anaplastic and glandular subtypes, which are similarly associated with increased aggressiveness and metastases. Dedifferentiated ChRCC shows loss of epithelial markers, convergent gene expression, and whole genome duplication from a hypodiploid state characteristic of classic ChRCC. We identified an intermediate state with atypia and increased mitosis but preserved epithelial markers. Our data suggest that dedifferentiation is initiated by hemizygous mutation of TP53, which can be observed in differentiated areas, as well as mutation of PTEN. Notably, these mutations become homozygous with duplication of preexisting monosomes (i.e., chromosomes 17 and 10), which characterizes the transition to dedifferentiated ChRCC. Serving as potential biomarkers, dedifferentiated areas become accentuated by mTORC1 activation (phospho-S6) and p53 stabilization. Notably, dedifferentiated ChRCC share gene enrichment and pathway activation features with other sarcomatoid RCC, suggesting convergent evolutionary trajectories. This study expands our understanding of aggressive ChRCC, provides insight into molecular mechanisms of tumor progression, and informs pathologic classification and diagnostics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11141915PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.176743DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Sarcomatoid dedifferentiation occurs in various renal cell carcinoma subtypes, including chromophobe RCC, leading to more aggressive disease and resistance to treatments, but increased response to immunotherapy.
  • Research on ChRCC reveals that it can dedifferentiate into sarcomatoid, anaplastic, and glandular forms, which are all linked to enhanced aggressiveness and metastasis.
  • Key mutations, like those in TP53 and PTEN, drive this dedifferentiation process, and specific genetic and molecular markers could help classify and diagnose these aggressive tumors more effectively.
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