A gene expression signature meant to distinguish between telomerase and alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) utilization was recently described (Lafferty-Whyte et al., 2009). This was generated from the intersection of two independent signatures obtained from cell lines and liposarcoma tumors, respectively, which utilize different telomere maintenance mechanisms (TMMs). To assess the utility of this signature, we used U133plus2.0 arrays (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA, USA) to undertake a similar analysis of an independent collection of liposarcomas with defined TMMs (see GEO accession {type:entrez-geo,attrs:{text:GSE20559,term_id:20559}}GSE20559, which includes full details of the methods). For our data set, use of the 297 gene signature causes the liposarcomas to cluster not on the basis of TMM, but rather on the basis of tumor histological subtype (Figure 1a), consistent with the signatures reported by others (Matushansky et al., 2008). Figure 1 Heatmap visualizations of the 297 gene signature from Lafferty-Whyte et al. (2009) for all genes having a corresponding Affymetrix probeset. Where more than one probeset was available, the one with the highest median expression across the dataset was ... To control for the effect of histological subtypes, we then restricted our analysis to dedifferentiated liposarcomas. Despite this constraint, when using linear modeling for microarrays (Limma; (Smyth, 2004)) to assess differential expression, we obtained no genes that are significantly changed, unless the data are pre-filtered to remove low-expressing non-varying probesets (cv 2), with no genes in common with the 297-gene signature of Lafferty-Whyte et al. (2009). This is in agreement with the previous study, where a similar approach failed to identify any genes that are significantly correlated with TMM, an observation that motivated their use of Fisher's exact test to produce a list of >6700 differentially expressed genes. We also performed unsupervised clustering of the dedifferentiated tumor data corresponding to the 297-gene signature (Figure 1b) and found no strong correlation between gene expression and TMM. It is possible that the discrepancies between our data and those of Lafferty-Whyte et al. (2009) reflect differences in microarray platform or tumor samples used. However, as the authors noted, the cell lines used in their study differ not only in TMM, but also in tissue of origin, with 75% of the telomerase-positive cell lines being of epithelial origin and 75% of the ALT cell lines being of fibroblastic origin. The initial gene signature obtained from comparing these two groups would be expected to contain a strong signature reflective of cell type, in addition to any putative TMM signature. Likewise, although we note that the histological subtypes of liposarcomas used to generate the 297 gene signature were not specified in this publication, or in the information uploaded into the GEO database, it can be largely deduced from an earlier publication from the same group (Cairney et al., 2008). Based on Table 1 in that report, we note that the ALT tumors are predominantly dedifferentiated liposarcomas, whereas the telomerase tumors are predominantly myxoid/round cell liposarcomas. Thus, a comparison of ALT versus telomerase tumors using this data set suffers from the confounding effect of differing histological subtypes in the two groups. Given the large-scale gene expression changes seen between cells of different origin and tumors of different histologies, it is perhaps not surprising that the 297 gene signature contains a strong component related to differentiation state, as shown in Figure 1a. Dedifferentiated liposarcomas differ markedly from myxoid liposarcomas; different genetic mechanisms drive the formation of these two types of liposarcoma. Dedifferentiated liposarcomas harbor complex karyotypes commonly containing Chr.12q12–15 amplification, whereas 90% of myxoid/round cell liposarcomas are characterized by a t(12;16)(q13–14;p11) translocation. Indeed, translocation driven sarcomas are generally telomerase positive, whereas those with complex karyotypes utilize ALT at an appreciable frequency (Montgomery et al., 2004; Ulaner et al., 2004), underscoring the bias in the sample set analyzed. This likely introduces a major confounding effect in their data set, with the set of ALT tumors heavily biased for dedifferentiated liposarcomas. As the expression signature of dedifferentiated liposarcoma more closely resembles mesenchymal stem cells than does that of myxoid/round cell liposarcoma (Matushansky et al., 2008), this may provide an explanation for their finding that ALT tumors appear to cluster with the mesenchymal stem cell samples. Certainly, our observation that the 297 gene signature fails to distinguish tumors based upon TMM in our independent set of tumors comprising a single histological type of liposarcoma suggests that this signature is not a robust indicator of TMM. Instead, it is likely that this 297-gene signature reflects differentiation differences associated with varying histological subtypes of liposarcoma.
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