Skip to content
The Kids Research Institute Australia logo
Donate

Discover . Prevent . Cure .

A novel BRD4-NUT fusion in an undifferentiated sinonasal tumor highlights alternative splicing as a contributing oncogenic factor in NUT midline carcinoma

In this study, we report the case of an adolescent NMC patient presenting with severe facial pain, proptosis and visual impairment due to a mass arising from...

Authors:
Stirnweiss A, McCarthy K, Oommen J, Crook ML, Hardy K, Kees UR, et al.

Authors notes:
Oncogenesis. 2015;4:e174.

Keywords:
BRD4-NUT, sinonasal tumor, splicing, oncogenic, NUT midline, carcinoma

Abstract:
NUT midline carcinoma (NMC) is a fatal cancer that arises in various tissues along the upper midline of the body.

The defining molecular feature of NMC is a chromosomal translocation that joins (in the majority of cases) the nuclear testis gene NUT (NUTM1) to the bromodomain protein family member 4 (BRD4) and thereby creating a fusion oncogene that disrupts cellular differentiation and drives the disease.

In this study, we report the case of an adolescent NMC patient presenting with severe facial pain, proptosis and visual impairment due to a mass arising from the ethmoid sinus that invaded the right orbit and frontal lobe.

Treatment involved radical resection, including exenteration of the affected eye with the view to consolidate treatment with radiation therapy; however, the patient experienced rapid tumor progression and passed away 79 days post resection.
Molecular analysis of the tumor tissue identified a novel in-frame BRD4-NUT transcript, with BRD4 exon 15 fused to the last 124 nucleotides of NUT exon 2.

The partial deletion of NUT exon 2 was attributed to a mid-exonic genomic breakpoint and the subsequent activation of a cryptic splice site further downstream within the exon.

Inhibition of the canonical 3′ acceptor splice site of NUT intron 1 in cell lines expressing the most common NMC fusion transcripts BRD4-NUT induced alternative splicing from the same cryptic splice site as identified in the patient.

Detection of low levels of an in-frame BRD4-NUT transcript in PER-403 confirmed endogenous splicing from this alternative exon 2 splice site.

Although further studies are necessary to assess the clinical relevance of the increasing number of variant fusions described in NMC, the findings presented in this case identify alternative splicing as a mechanism that contributes to this pathogenic complexity.