Single-cell genomics reveals the genetic and molecular bases for escape from mutational epistasis in myeloid neoplasms

Large-scale sequencing studies of hematologic malignancies have revealed notable epistasis among high-frequency mutations. One of the most striking examples of epistasis occurs for mutations in RNA splicing factors. These lesions are among the most common alterations in myeloid neoplasms and general...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2020-09, Vol.136 (13), p.1477-1486
Hauptverfasser: Taylor, Justin, Mi, Xiaoli, North, Khrystyna, Binder, Moritz, Penson, Alexander, Lasho, Terra, Knorr, Katherine, Haddadin, Michael, Liu, Bo, Pangallo, Joseph, Benbarche, Salima, Wiseman, Daniel, Tefferi, Ayalew, Halene, Stephanie, Liang, Yang, Patnaik, Mrinal M., Bradley, Robert K., Abdel-Wahab, Omar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Large-scale sequencing studies of hematologic malignancies have revealed notable epistasis among high-frequency mutations. One of the most striking examples of epistasis occurs for mutations in RNA splicing factors. These lesions are among the most common alterations in myeloid neoplasms and generally occur in a mutually exclusive manner, a finding attributed to their synthetic lethal interactions and/or convergent effects. Curiously, however, patients with multiple-concomitant splicing factor mutations have been observed, challenging our understanding of one of the most common examples of epistasis in hematologic malignancies. In this study, we performed bulk and single-cell analyses of patients with myeloid malignancy who were harboring ≥2 splicing factor mutations, to understand the frequency and basis for the coexistence of these mutations. Although mutations in splicing factors were strongly mutually exclusive across 4231 patients (q < .001), 0.85% harbored 2 concomitant bona fide splicing factor mutations, ∼50% of which were present in the same individual cells. However, the distribution of mutations in patients with double mutations deviated from that in those with single mutations, with selection against the most common alleles, SF3B1K700E and SRSF2P95H/L/R, and selection for less common alleles, such as SF3B1 non-K700E mutations, rare amino acid substitutions at SRSF2P95, and combined U2AF1S34/Q157 mutations. SF3B1 and SRSF2 alleles enriched in those with double-mutations had reduced effects on RNA splicing and/or binding compared with the most common alleles. Moreover, dual U2AF1 mutations occurred in cis with preservation of the wild-type allele. These data highlight allele-specific differences as critical in regulating the molecular effects of splicing factor mutations as well as their cooccurrences/exclusivities with one another. •Escape from epistasis of RNA splicing factor mutations occurs with specific mutant alleles and preservation of 1 wild-type allele.•Allele-specific differences in RNA binding and/or splicing account for exclusivity vs cooccurrence of splicing factor mutations. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood.2020006868