Genetic profiling of synchronous pituitary corticotroph adenomas.

in Pituitary by Dongyun Zhang, Karen Tsai, Cristian Santana, Keanu Javaherian, Matthew Lee, Marvin Bergsneider, Won Kim, Marilene B Wang, Harry V Vinters, Weihong Yan, Anthony P Heaney

TLDR

  • A 43-year-old female patient was found to have two distinct corticotroph adenomas, each with a unique somatic genetic variant: a loss-of-function variant in GPR162 and a novel missense variant in USP8.
  • These variants showed opposing effects on POMC transcription, with the GPR162 variant affecting corticotroph proliferation, while the USP8 variant did not show a significant impact on proliferation.

Abstract

Double or multiple pituitary adenomas account for only 1.6-3.3% of all corticotroph tumors. We sought to better understand the underlying molecular pathogenesis of two distinct corticotroph adenomas in a 43-year-old female. Two histopathologically confirmed corticotroph adenomas were submitted for whole-exome sequencing along with a matched blood sample. The functional effects of identified variants of uncertain significance on corticotroph tumor pro-opiomelanocortin transcription and proliferation were characterized. WES demonstrated a loss-of-function variant in the G-protein coupled receptor 162 [GPR162 (R218*)] in the right corticotroph tumor, and a novel missense variant in ubiquitin specific peptidase 8 [USP8 (P681Q)] in the left tumor. Compared to wild-type GPR162 which potently suppressed POMC transcription, the stop-gain variant (R218*) exhibited reduced inhibitory effect. The novel USP8 variant (P681Q) found in the contra-lateral tumor led to increased POMC transcription although weaker than the well characterized hotspot variant S718P, and did not affect EGFR ubiquitin. Interestingly, the patient also had a germline variant in the 21-alpha-hydroxylase gene (CYP21A2 p.A392T) though without clinical features of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. We report, for the first time, the genetic profiles of a patient with dual pituitary corticotroph tumors, identifying a stop-gain variant in GPR162 in one tumor and a novel USP8 variant (S718P) in the other. While both somatic variants increased POMC expression, only GPR162 R218* affected proliferation. We hypothesize that alterations in adrenal steroidogenesis due to the CYP21A1 mutation may have reduced negative feedback on corticotroph cells and acted in a permissive way to facilitate corticotroph tumorigenesis.

Overview

  • The study aimed to investigate the molecular pathogenesis of two distinct corticotroph adenomas in a 43-year-old female patient.
  • The researchers analyzed two histopathologically confirmed corticotroph adenomas, whole-exome sequencing of both tumors, and a matched blood sample.
  • The primary objective was to understand the genetic changes underlying the tumorigenesis of the corticotroph adenomas and their potential effect on pro-opiomelanocortin transcription and proliferation.

Comparative Analysis & Findings

  • The whole-exome sequencing identified a loss-of-function variant in the G-protein coupled receptor 162 (GPR162 R218*) in one tumor and a novel missense variant in ubiquitin specific peptidase 8 (USP8 P681Q) in the other tumor.
  • The two variants showed opposing effects on POMC transcription, with GPR162 R218* exhibiting a reduced inhibitory effect and USP8 P681Q leading to increased POMC transcription.
  • The GPR162 R218* variant also affected corticotroph proliferation, while the USP8 P681Q variant did not show a significant impact on proliferation.

Implications and Future Directions

  • The study provides novel insights into the genetic mechanisms underlying corticotroph tumorigenesis and highlights the importance of considering the effects of germline mutations on adrenal steroidogenesis for the development of corticotroph tumors.
  • Future studies could investigate the potential therapeutic applications of targeting GPR162 or USP8 in corticotroph tumors, as well as exploring the role of adrenal steroidogenesis in the development of these tumors.
  • The identification of somatic variants in GPR162 and USP8 provides new targets for the development of targeted therapies for corticotroph adenomas.