Abstract

Isocitric dehydrogenase (IDH)-wild type diffuse gliomas, which have a poorer prognosis than their IDH-mutant counterparts, are also accompanied with high heterogeneity. Here, we aimed to identify the key biological processes associated with the three groups of IDH-wild type diffuse gliomas in 323 patients. By The Consortium to Inform Molecular and Practical Approaches to CNS Tumor Taxonomy (cIMPACT-NOW) update 3 recommendation, the three groups are Group A, diffuse astrocytic glioma, World Health Organization (WHO) grade II/III; Group B, diffuse astrocytic glioma, with one (or more) of the three genetic alterations: TERT promoter mutation, EGFR gene amplification, gain of chromosome 7 combined with loss of chromosome 10, WHO grade IV; and Group C, glioblastoma, WHO grade IV. Consistent with their histologic and genetic molecular features, we successfully identified that biological activities associated with “cell cycle” and “cell mitosis” are significantly elevated in Group B compared with Group A; microenvironment-related hallmarks “angiogenesis” and “hypoxia,” and biological processes of “extracellular matrix,” “immune response,” and “positive regulation of transcriptional activities” were more enriched in Group C than Group B. We also constructed a nine-gene signature from differentially expressed genes among the three groups to further stratify the WHO grade IV gliomas (Groups B and C) whose survival cannot be clearly stratified by current classification systems. This signature was an independent prognosis factor for WHO grade IV gliomas and had better prognostic value than other known factors in both training and validation dataset. In addition, the signature risk score was positively correlated with the amount of infiltrated immune cells, expression of immune checkpoints, and the genes enriched in biological processes of “immune response,” “cell cycle,” and “extracellular matrix.” The bioinformatic analysis results were also validated by immunohistochemistry and patient-derived cell proliferation assay. Overall, our findings revealed the key biological processes underlying the new classifications of IDH-wild type diffuse glioma. Meanwhile, we constructed a signature, which could properly stratify the prognosis, cell proliferation activates, extracellular matrix-mediated biological activities, and immune-microenvironment of IDH-wild type WHO grade IV gliomas.

Highlights

  • Diffuse glioma is one of most common types of malignant primary tumor in the central nervous system (CNS) (Jiang et al, 2016)

  • To understand the differences among these three subgroups, we compared the survival of Group A, Group B, and Group C in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset, and the results indicated that Group A survival was significantly longer than the other two groups, but the survival of World Health Organization (WHO) grade IV tumors cannot be stratified by Group B and Group C (Figure 1B)

  • The similar results could be observed in the Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas (CGGA) database when we used the telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter status to stratify the isocitric dehydrogenase (IDH)-wild type diffuse astrocytic gliomas (Supplementary Tables 4, 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Diffuse glioma is one of most common types of malignant primary tumor in the CNS (Jiang et al, 2016). According to the WHO classification of tumors of the CNS, diffuse gliomas are classified into grades II to IV based on histologic features (Jiang et al, 2016; Louis et al, 2016). IDH-wild type gliomas, including diffuse astrocytic gliomas (WHO grade II/III) and GBM (WHO grade IV), have a poorer prognosis compared with the same histologic IDH-mutant gliomas (Chai et al, 2020). Growing evidence indicated that some IDH-wild type astrocytic gliomas had similar molecular features and prognosis of IDH-wild type GBM (Yang et al, 2016; Aibaidula et al, 2017; Pekmezci et al, 2017; Wijnenga et al, 2017), suggesting that the specific subgroup of IDH-wild type glioma still needs to be further classified

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