Abstract

Since the discovery, in 1994, of recurrent codeletion of chromosome regions 1p36/19q13 in oligodendrogliomas, genetics has accomplished significant advances improving our knowledge in biology of this tumor type and our clinical management of oligodendroglioma patients. Indeed, 1p36/19q13 has been shown successively to predict increased chemosensitivity and better prognosis, to be associated with frontal location in brain and classic oligodendroglioma morphology, to be mutually exclusive with high-level gene amplification, to be actually whole chromosome arms 1p/19q codeletion, to mediate a t(1;19)(q10;p10) and to be associated with IDH mutations. More recently, pivotal studies, using high-throughput approaches, have provided significant novel insights in the molecular oncogenesis of oligodendrogliomas. Capicua homolog (Drosophila) (CIC) and Far Upstream element Binding Protein 1 (FUBP1) have been shown to be frequently mutated in 70 and 40% of 1p/19q codeleted oligodendrogliomas, respectively. The biological and clinical significance of these mutations remains unsettled. Additional recent studies have also demonstrated that 1p/19q codeleted oligodendrogliomas exhibit a proneural transcriptomic profile including overexpression of internexin alpha, a neuronal intermediate filament. Finally, 1p/19q codeleted and IDH-mutated tumors have been shown to be hypermethylated, suggesting a strong link between these both molecular alterations detected in the subgroup of oligodendrogliomas with better prognosis. Next-generation molecular biology technologies have recently identified recurrent CIC and FUBP1 point mutations in 1p/19q codeleted and IDH-mutated oligodendrogliomas. Their clinical and biological values are under investigation.

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