We speculate that PTCH2 modulates tumorigenesis linked to the PTCH1 mutation and is likely associated with the congenital onset of the RMS observed in our patient.
It now appears that constitutive activation of Hedgehog signalling, by inactivating mutations in PTCH1 or activating mutations in the coreceptor SMOH, is required and possibly sufficient for basal cell carcinoma development and also contributes to the formation of a variety of other tumour types, including medulloblastoma and rhabdomyosarcoma.
Over the last few years, studies have demonstrated the occurrence of autophagy in different Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK)-associated cancers, notably ALK-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL), non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), Neuroblastoma (NB), and Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS).
In several of these cases, activation of HH-GLI signaling is mediated by overproduction of HH ligands (e.g., prostate cancer), loss-of-function mutations in <i>PTCH1</i> or gain-of-function mutations in <i>SMO</i>, which occur in the majority of basal cell carcinoma (BCC), SHH-subtype medulloblastoma and rhabdomyosarcoma.
Missense mutations of FGFR2 are found in endometrial uterine cancer and melanoma, and similar FGFR3 mutations in invasive bladder tumors, and FGFR4 mutations in rhabdomyosarcoma.
Our results of common HRAS mutations and composite gene signature with RMS and neuronal/neuroblastic elements suggest a closer genetic link of MEM to RMS rather than to MPNST.
To gain an understanding of the relationship between constitutional HRAS mutations and malignancy, HRAS was sequenced in an advanced biphasic rhabdomyosarcoma/fibrosarcoma from an individual with a 34G --> A mutation.
The results demonstrate that tumor profiling in archival tissue samples is a useful tool for identifying diagnostic markers and potential therapeutic targets and suggests that these HRAS/ PIK3CA mutations play a critical role in the genesis of RMS.
Additional in trans DICER1 missense somatic mutations in the IIIb DICER1 domain were found both in the cystic nephroma and in the rhabdomyosarcoma, suggesting that neoplasms in this family might arise from the unusual two-hit mechanism for DICER-derived tumorigenesis in which after the presence of a truncated constitutive protein, a neomorphic DICER1 activity is somatically adquired.
Two cases of primary supratentorial intracranial rhabdomyosarcoma with DICER1 mutation which may belong to a "spindle cell sarcoma with rhabdomyosarcoma-like feature, DICER1 mutant".
These data suggest that the genetic progression in rhabdomyosarcoma from MVA and non-MVA cases may be similar, but that somatic BUB1B mutations are unlikely to be common in sporadic childhood cancers known to be associated with MVA.
From the investigated 17 samples, seven (41%) showed homozygous mutation of MYOD1, indicating a critical role in this rare subtype of adult spindle cell RMS, while no mutations were found in any of the other genes involved in myogenic differentiation.
We have previously reported that the number of functional IGF-2 alleles is frequently increased in rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), as a consequence of either relaxation of imprinting (LOI) or gene duplication.
We investigated 30 cases of MYOD1-mutant rhabdomyosarcoma (12 previously reported and 18 newly diagnosed) with an age range of 2-94 years, including 15 children.
Clinically, a striking correlation was found between MYOD1 mutation and the clinical outcomes available for 15 of 21 cases: 5 of 7 patients with spindle cell and sclerosing rhabdomyosarcomas, harboring MYOD1 mutation, were alive-with-disease and 2 of 8 patients with spindle cell and sclerosing rhabdomyosarcomas, with mutant MYOD1, were free-of-disease.
The expanding morphological and genetic spectrum of MYOD1-mutant spindle cell/sclerosing rhabdomyosarcomas: a clinicopathological and molecular comparison of mutated and non-mutated cases.