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Article

The PI3K/mTOR Pathway Is Targeted by Rare Germline Variants in Patients with Both Melanoma and Renal Cell Carcinoma

1
Section of Genetics, International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC-WHO), 69372 Lyon, France
2
Gustave Roussy, Département de Biopathologie, 94805 Villejuif, France
3
Department of Dermatology, AP-HP, Hôpital Avicenne, University Paris 13, 93000 Bobigny, France
4
UMRS-1124, Campus Paris Saint-Germain-des-Prés, University of Paris, 75006 Paris, France
5
Centre National de Recherche en Génomique Humaine, Université Paris-Saclay, CEA, 91057 Evry, France
6
Association Robert Debré pour la Recherche Médicale, 75006 Paris, France
7
INSERM U1279, Tumor Cell Dynamics, 94805 Villejuif, France
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally.
Cancers 2021, 13(9), 2243; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092243
Submission received: 10 March 2021 / Revised: 26 April 2021 / Accepted: 28 April 2021 / Published: 7 May 2021

Abstract

:

Simple Summary

Patients with malignant melanoma have an increased risk of being affected by kidney cancer and vice versa. Lifestyle risk factors contributing to these cancers differ. Instead, our study aims to assess whether common genetic predispositions may be at play. Here we reveal the clinical and germline genetic characteristics of a series of 125 patients diagnosed with both malignant melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC), the most common type of kidney cancer. Clinical testing of known predisposing genes only explains a minority of either or both cancer occurrences. Instead, a wide exploration of all coding genes identified 13 novel susceptibility candidates more prone to rare deleterious germline mutations than expected in cancer-free controls, and converging to a common signaling pathway. This research highlights methods to better characterize cancer (co-)heritability. It also provides a basis to better understand and diagnose melanoma and RCC, which is essential for adequate clinical management.

Abstract

Background: Malignant melanoma and RCC have different embryonic origins, no common lifestyle risk factors but intriguingly share biological properties such as immune regulation and radioresistance. An excess risk of malignant melanoma is observed in RCC patients and vice versa. This bidirectional association is poorly understood, and hypothetic genetic co-susceptibility remains largely unexplored. Results: We hereby provide a clinical and genetic description of a series of 125 cases affected by both malignant melanoma and RCC. Clinical germline mutation testing identified a pathogenic variant in a melanoma and/or RCC predisposing gene in 17/125 cases (13.6%). This included mutually exclusive variants in MITF (p.E318K locus, N = 9 cases), BAP1 (N = 3), CDKN2A (N = 2), FLCN (N = 2), and PTEN (N = 1). A subset of 46 early-onset cases, without underlying germline variation, was whole-exome sequenced. In this series, thirteen genes were significantly enriched in mostly exclusive rare variants predicted to be deleterious, compared to 19,751 controls of similar ancestry. The observed variation mainly consisted of novel or low-frequency variants (<0.01%) within genes displaying strong evolutionary mutational constraints along the PI3K/mTOR pathway, including PIK3CD, NFRKB, EP300, MTOR, and related epigenetic modifier SETD2. The screening of independently processed germline exomes from The Cancer Genome Atlas confirmed an association with melanoma and RCC but not with cancers of established differing etiology such as lung cancers. Conclusions: Our study highlights that an exome-wide case-control enrichment approach may better characterize the rare variant-based missing heritability of multiple primary cancers. In our series, the co-occurrence of malignant melanoma and RCC was associated with germline variation in the PI3K/mTOR signaling cascade, with potential relevance for early diagnostic and clinical management.

1. Introduction

Malignant melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are the fifth and seventh most common cancers expected to be diagnosed in 2019 in the United States, accounting respectively for 5% and 4% of all cases [1] and responsible for over 235,000 deaths worldwide in 2018 [2]. The vast majority of malignant melanomas arise from skin, while less than 10% are of ocular, mucosal, or undetermined primary origin [3]. Co-occurrence of both a cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) and an RCC represents 0.5% of CMM cases and 1% of RCC cases [4]. We previously described a set of 42 French cases with co-occurrence of both cancers [4]. Despite different embryonic origins, CMM and RCC share biological properties such as immune regulation, radioresistance, as well as patterns of response to immunotherapies [5,6]. Several epidemiological studies consistently reported an increased incidence of melanoma after RCC and vice versa, based on standardized incidence ratios (SIR) of second cancers calculated in different countries, including Italy, the USA, Germany, and Norway [5]. Based on the US population registry, melanoma patients had a 34% increased incidence of RCC, whereas RCC patients had a 45% increased incidence of melanoma [5]. The reasons underlying the bidirectional association between CMM and RCC are not yet elucidated. Non-random causes of multiple occurrences of primary cancer include common environmental/lifestyle factors and/or shared genetic etiology.
Main environmental and host risk factors for CMM include ultraviolet (UV) light exposure, history of sunburn in childhood or adolescence, number or type of melanocytic nevi, and pigmentation [7]. Confirmed risk factors for RCC include tobacco smoking, excess body weight, history of hypertension, and chronic kidney disease [8]. To date, there is no established risk factor common to both melanoma and RCC, although the role of obesity in melanoma warrants further investigations following inconsistent reports in more recent years [9,10].
Common genetic predisposition only explains a minority of malignant melanoma or RCC. Risk loci identified by genome-wide association studies (GWAS) account for about 10% of RCC risk and 19% (USA) to 30% (Australia) of melanoma risk, respectively [11,12]. Among the common loci for melanoma susceptibility, the melanocortin 1 receptor MC1R is an outstanding gene. It encodes a transmembrane receptor regulating melanin through the control of melanocyte-inducing transcription factor (MITF) expression and activity [13,14]. MC1R is a highly polymorphic gene within Caucasian populations as an evolutionary consequence of the migration of ancestral populations to an environment with reduced UV light exposure. These polymorphisms functionally impact various receptor functions, modulating skin photoprotective pigments eumelanin/pheomelanin ratio [14]. Both epidemiological and biochemistry studies documented a carcinogenic role of pheomelanins produced by functionally impaired receptor encoded by some MC1R allelic variants, considered as disruptive [15]: suspected underlying mechanisms included increased oxidative stress, inflammation, and immunomodulation [13], resulting in low to moderate melanoma risk [16].
A substantial component of the missing genetic susceptibility may come from rarer variants not addressed by GWAS [17]. In melanoma-prone families, predisposing genes target the cell cycle (CDKN2A, CDK4) or telomere regulation (ACD, POT1, TERF2IP, TERT) [18] whereas RCC predisposing genes target mainly metabolism, in particular, the Akt/HIF pathway (FH, FLCN, MET, PTEN, SDHs, TSC1, TSC2, and VHL), and epigenome regulation (PBRM1 and BAP1). Inherited mutations in two genes, MITF and BAP1, predispose to both CMM and RCC. MITF encodes a transcription factor whose M-isoform specifically expressed in melanocytes, coordinates a wide range of biological processes such as cell survival, differentiation, proliferation, invasion, senescence, metabolism, and DNA damage repair [19]. Interestingly, isoform Mitfa (widely-expressed) deficiency does not visibly alter mice pigmentation in skin and eye, although it results in reduced nephron number, whereas overexpression of Mitfa leads to a substantial increase of nephron number and bigger kidneys [20]. We previously reported a hotspot mutation in MITF, p.(E318K), significantly more frequent in melanoma and/or RCC genetically-enriched cases than in controls [21]. The second gene, BAP1, has been shown to predispose to various cancers of different embryonic origins, among which the core tumoral spectrum is composed of cutaneous and ocular melanoma, RCC, and mesothelioma [22]. BAP1 encodes a deubiquitinase regulating a number of processes, including DNA damage repair, cell cycle control, chromatin modification, programmed cell death, and immune responses [23].
Physiologically, both the epidermis (where melanocytes are located) and the inner renal medulla are hypoxic tissues [24,25]. MITFE318K germline hotspot mutation was shown to impair MITF SUMOylation, to increase the affinity for the hypoxia-induced HIF1A promoter, and to enhance migration, invasion, and clonogenicity of melanoma and renal cancer cells [21]. Various environmental stresses, including hypoxia and reactive oxygen species (ROS), were previously shown to induce global protein SUMOylation [26]. In this context, MITFE318K could impair the adaptation of cells to stress and initiate tumor formation. Among the genes differentially regulated between MitfWT and MitfE318K in a mouse model, CDKN2B [27] was previously described as an RCC predisposing gene [28]. Besides, BAP1 deubiquitinase activity is associated with intra-cellular ROS homeostasis and sensitivity to oxidative stress [29]. Altogether, both etiology and biology suggest that malignant melanoma and RCC may share molecular pathogenic pathways, possibly related to oxidative stress cellular responses.
The first aim of the current study is to update the clinical and genetic description of an extended set of 125 patients affected by both melanoma and RCC. The second is to identify potential new candidate co-susceptibility genes through an agnostic approach, performing whole-exome sequencing (WES) on a subset of 46 early-onset patients and testing for gene-based enrichment in rare deleterious variants against large series of external controls.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Recruitment of Patients and Data Collection

A total of 125 cases with a confirmed diagnosis of malignant melanoma and RCC were recruited over a 40 year period (from 1979 to 2018) through French dermatological or oncogenetic clinics, as previously described for the first 42 enrolled cases [4].

2.2. Ethic and Consent

The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB#00001072, CCPPRB Paris Necker and Ethical Committee of Le Kremlin-Bicêtre University Hospital; N°2001-09-05; N°2010-01-09). All subjects gave written informed consent before participation.

2.3. Clinical Genetic Testing

All 125 individuals in the cohort had their blood drawn after genetic counseling and diagnostic only or diagnostic and research-informed consent. Germline DNA was extracted using the QIAamp DNA Blood mini kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany), according to the manufacturer’s guidelines [30]. Before 2017, upon clinical indications based on personal and familial cancer history, cases (N = 122) were tested for established melanoma predisposing genes, namely BAP1, CDKN2A, CDK4, MC1R, MITF, and/or RCC predisposing genes, guided, when applicable, by histological subtypes (BAP1, FH, FLCN, MITF, and VHL) in a clinical laboratory. Point mutations were screened by Sanger sequencing: for tumor suppressor genes, this included all coding exons ± 25 bp flanking intronic sequences; for the two oncogenes, Sanger sequencing was restricted to the exon with known mutation hotspot (exon 2 for CDK4 and exon 9 for MITF). In addition, genomic rearrangements were searched through quantitative PCR (q-PCR) and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MPLA), as previously described [30]. One case was sequenced based on phenotypic indications for the familial PTEN loss of function germline mutation and was found carrier. From 2017 onwards, three cases were analyzed for melanoma and RCC predisposing genes by multigene panel next-generation sequencing (NGS), including BAP1, CDKN2A, CDK4, FH, FLCN, MC1R, MET, MITF, SDHB, and VHL genes; one was a carrier of the MITF p.Glu318Lys, the others were wild-type for all genes analyzed. NGS was performed using a library designed to capture all exons ± 50 bp (Capture Agilent SureSelect QXT) then run on a MiSeq Illumina to a minimum depth of 100×. Sequencing data (FastQ files) were generated by MiSeq Analysis software, and subsequently, alignment (GRCh37) and variant calling (including structural variants) were performed with an in-house developed bioinformatics pipeline including BWA alignment [31], haplotype-based GATK variant calling [32], and snpEff annotation [33]. Variants interpretation was performed following the standards and guidelines recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) [34] by board-certified (Agence de la biomédecine, France) clinical molecular geneticists. MC1R variants were classified as “R”, moderate melanoma risk (D84E, R142H, R151C, R160W, D294H), and “r”, low melanoma risk (V60L, V92M, I155T, R163Q) [35]. In addition, three variants too rare for melanoma association studies were found, two were associated with red hair color (RHC) in the UK Biobank (T95M and I180fs) [36], and the last one, F196V, was not associated with any functional or genetic data.

2.4. Exome Sequencing, Variant Calling, and Filtering

A subset of 46 cases was further investigated by exome sequencing of blood DNA: they were cases among the youngest age of onset, for whom clinical testing did not identify any clinically relevant germline mutation and whose informed consent agreed for anonymous genomic research. Exome captures were performed using a SureSelect Human All Exon V5 kit (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). Sequencing was performed on a HiSeq 2000 (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA), with 100 bp paired-end reads, to achieve minimum on-target coverage of 60 to 70×.
Nextflow-based [37] exome processing pipelines are available through GitHub (https://github.com/IARCbioinfo accessed on 25 January 2021). In brief, sequencing reads were aligned on GRCh38 with BWA v0.7.15 [31], postalT-processed, and duplicate reads were marked with Sambamba v0.6.6 [38]. Variant calling was performed with GATK v4.1.4.1 and strictly followed Best Practices recommendations [32,39] for base quality recalibration, haplotype calling, joint genotyping, variant filtering, and recalibration. Genomic positions with more than 10% missing data and/or heterozygous sites with an alternative allelic fraction of less than 25% were discarded. Sex concordance between clinical and sequencing data was confirmed using PLINK v1.90 [40].
Variants were annotated with ANNOVAR 2020Apr01 version [41]. Variants deviating from expected Hardy–Weinberg proportions were discarded [42]. A variant was considered a rare variant if its allele frequency was equal or inferior to 0.25%, that is, the allele frequency of MITF p.E318K hotspot, in any gnomAD v2.1.1 outbred population [43,44]. Variant deleteriousness was assessed using both Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion (CADD v1.4) [45] and ClinVar (version 20200316) [46] databases. Variants with a CADD phred-like rank score ≥ 20, and/or two or more non-conflicting “Pathogenic” or “Likely pathogenic” ClinVar annotations, and/or identified as frameshift indels with mapping quality ≥ 50, were designated as deleterious, that is, likely to impact the function of the encoded protein.

2.5. Gene-Based Case-Control Analyses

To identify potential genes enriched in rare deleterious variations in our 46 cases, we implemented the Proxy External Controls Association Test approach (ProxECAT) [47]. The proxECAT-weighted test is tailored to rare variants case-control association analyses using publicly available datasets as control. It uses the synonymous variation information to adjust for differences in data processing. Our external control set consisted of gnomAD European samples assigned to a north-western sub-continental ancestry and not ascertained for having cancer in a cancer study (N = 19,751). In brief, VCF files publicly distributed along with gnomAD v2.1 release were converted to GRCh38 using LiftoverVcf from Picard Toolkit v2.19 (http://broadinstitute.github.io/picard accessed on 25 January 2021), and annotated similarly to our case series. Likelihood-ratio test p-values were adjusted using the conservative genomic control factor approach to take into account population stratification [48]. The corresponding q-values were computed using the Benjamini–Hochberg procedure to control the false-discovery rate [49].

2.6. Validation of Candidate Genes and Variants

Two complementary series of controls were used to evaluate our candidates further. We first check our variants’ loci in an internal control series, consisting of exome samples (N = 288) of Eastern European ancestries, collected as non-cancer controls as part of our previous lung cancer susceptibility study [50], and processed similarly to internal cases. Candidate variants were then searched within a French reference panel available through the French Exome Project (FrEx) database (N = 574) to check for potential population-specific recurrent variation that would be unlikely to cause the observed phenotype (http://lysine.univ-brest.fr/FrExAC, accessed on 25 January 2021) [51].
Variants driving the enrichment of candidate genes identified by the ProxECAT gene-based enrichment test were manually inspected using IGV genome browser v2.5.3 [52] and curated using complementary annotations, including updated region-, gene-, and variant-based annotations from Ensembl release 102 and gnomAD v3.1. Association between genetic variation and clinical parameters, including the age of cancer onset, personal history of cancer, familial history of melanoma or RCC, and histological subtypes, was assessed using the Fisher exact test for categorical variables and the Mann–Whitney U test for continuous variables.
The biological relevance of our candidate genes was evaluated through a literature-based search for a link with disease susceptibility and/or cancer development. A functional pathway enrichment analysis was also performed with g:Profiler (version e102_eg49_p15_7a9b4d6) [53] using the Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (KEGG) and WikiPathways as biological pathway sources. Additionally, we screened similar cancer series from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), namely skin cutaneous melanoma (SKCM, N = 470), kidney renal clear cell (KIRC, N = 344), and kidney renal papillary cell (KIRP, N = 289). To assess potential enrichment in those series compared to other cancer types of established differing etiology, we extended the screening to two additional TCGA series of similar size and a similar proportion of overall deleterious variants carriers [54], i.e., lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD, N = 540) and lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC, N = 514). In brief, TCGA exomes (TCGA access #2731) were acquired from the Institute for Systems Biology Cancer Genome Cloud (release 1.1, https://isb-cgc.appspot.com accessed on 25 January 2021). Germline variant calling was performed in-house using Platypus (https://github.com/IARCbioinfo/platypus-nf accessed on 25 January 2021) [55]. Rare deleterious variants affecting our 13 candidate genes in any of those series were reported, together with loci reported as familial cancer susceptibility variant in the literature, irrespective of the type of familial cancer affected.

3. Results

3.1. Overview of Clinical Sequencing Results

The demographic and histological characteristics of the 125 cases with both malignant melanoma and RCC are detailed in Table 1. Upon clinical indication based on personal and familial cancer history and, when applicable, RCC histological subtypes, cases were tested for established melanoma and/or RCC predisposing genes. In addition, all cases were tested for germline MITF mutations as part of a translational research work and nine cases carried the germline missense substitution p.E318K: this mutation was predominantly observed in men (8/9), cases were frequently affected by more than one CMM (4/9), and the associated RCC subtypes were diverse (Table 2). Three carriers of BAP1 pathogenic mutations were detected out of ten individuals tested. Sixty-eight individuals were tested for both CDKN2A and CDK4 mutations, among whom only two were carriers of a CDKN2A pathogenic mutation. Two carriers of a pathogenic FLCN mutation were detected out of the ten tested. Both patients showed clinical signs suggestive of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome, namely fibrofolliculoma and leiomyosarcoma, respectively. One individual was tested for the familial pathogenic germline PTEN mutation and was found carrier, as well as her acral melanoma affected daughter. No carriers of pathogenic mutation were found out of 47 tested for VHL, and 57 for FH. In total, 17/125 (13.6%) were carriers of a pathogenic germline mutation (Table 2). Among these 17 cases, 12 (70%) carried, in addition, at least one MC1R variant.

3.2. WES Confirmed Infrequent Pathogenic Variants in Melanoma and/or RCC Risk Genes

A subset of 46 cases, among the youngest age of onset and wild type upon diagnostic testing indication, was selected for further exploration by exome sequencing. Variant calling yielded a total of 3 × 105 variants evenly distributed across samples, with a median number of 89,593 variants per case. This included an average of 130 rare (AF ≤ 0.25%) variants hereto defined as ‘deleterious’ (CADD ≥ 20, and/or congruent ClinVar annotations of pathogenicity, and/or high-quality frameshift).
We first looked at an extended list of high-risk genes predisposing to melanoma (ACD, CDKN2A, CDK4, POT1, TERF2IP, and TERT) [56] or RCC (CDKN2B, FH, FLCN, MET, PBRM1, PTEN, SDHs, TSCs, and VHL) or both (BAP1 and MITF) [57]. Exome sequencing confirmed the absence of any rare deleterious variation in genes included in the clinical genetic testing, with one exception. A stop-gain variant (p.W306*; rs142934950) in the shorter isoform (isoform 2) of FLCN (NM_144606.6) was observed in two cases (Supplementary Table S1). Manual inspection revealed that the variant was located in the intronic sequence of the reference transcript used in clinical practice (RefSeq NM_144997). No conclusion could be drawn about pathogenicity as the function of FLCN isoform 2 has not yet been elucidated [58]. Further, a single unpublished and very rare (AF ≤ 0.01%) missense variant (rs1303562362) was observed in ACD (p.L511R, CADD of 26.1), affecting a highly conserved residue located in the C-terminal TINF2 binding domain [485–544] [59]. ACD encodes a protein of the shelterin complex, which protects chromosomal ends and is required to inhibit the elongation of chromosome ends in somatic cells. ACD loss of function (LOF) mutations predispose to melanoma and a broader spectrum of cancers [59]. Despite the fact that no RCCs were reported in ACD carriers to date [59,60,61], a meta-analysis suggested that individuals with an inherited predisposition to longer telomere length are at increased risk of developing renal cell carcinoma [62]. Two other cases respectively harbored a novel 14-base-pair deletion (c.2228_2240del p.(Q743fs)) and a rare missense VUS (rs1588304158) in TSC1. TSC1 is a tumor suppressor involved in the control of mTOR activation [63]. Germline heterozygous mutations in TSC1 are known to be responsible for hamartoma syndromes, including tuberous sclerosis (TS) that confer increased susceptibility to renal cancer [64]. Of note, the TSC1 variants observed in our series were located in exons 17 and 18, encoding part of the tuberin-binding region regularly targeted in TS [65].

3.3. Gene-Based Case-Control Analysis Identified 13 Candidate Susceptibility Genes

To elucidate further malignant melanoma and RCC potential shared genetic susceptibility, we applied an agnostic approach that consisted in assessing gene-based enrichment in rare deleterious exonic variants in our series compared to large series of external non-cancer controls from similar ancestry (Figure 1). The control set encompassed gnomAD non-cancer individuals from north-western European ancestry (N = 19,751). We used the ProxECAT test [47], an allele-frequency-based association test allowing us to make the most of publicly available control datasets, while controlling for differences in internal versus external data processing via synonymous variants.
A total of 4446 genes that displayed at least one variant matching our rarity and deleteriousness criteria were tested. Given the distribution of gene-based q-values (Supplementary Table S2 and Supplemental Information), further analyses were restricted to genes displaying a q-value of 0.2 or less. A total of 13 genes displayed a significant enrichment in rare deleterious variants in cases compared to controls, namely PIK3CD, MTOR, RAE1, ZBTB21, ESAM, TMEM192, CLTCL1, NFRKB, EP300, MTSS2, SETD2, SMC2, and EBF4 (Table S3, Supplemental Information). Most candidate genes showed strong evolutionary mutational constraint, arguing against the random accumulation of functionally impacting mutations (Table 3). Altogether, they comprised 41 distinct rare deleterious variants (Table 4). Twenty-five of them (61%) were novel or very rare variants (MAF < 0.01%). Overall, 33 of our 46 cases (72%) showed at least one mutation in at least one candidate gene (Table S1). Combined with the ACD, TSC1, and FLCN mutations uncovered in the previous search focusing on known susceptibility genes to CMM or RCC, potential candidate(s) were identified in 34 of 46 cases (74%; Table S1). This was not significantly different in cases with a family history of CMM and/or RCC (four of five cases with at least one affected first-degree relative, i.e., 80% of the cases with a positive family history) versus sporadic cases (30/41 = 73%). The majority of the mutations were exclusive: a single hit in a unique gene was observed in 29 of 34 cases, i.e., 85% of the mutated cases. While the concordance rate between the two methods of MC1R variants identification (exome sequencing versus clinical sequencing) was 100%, there were no differences in the MC1R status (presence of disruptive and/or non-disruptive variants versus absence of variant) according to the above mutational status. In our series, there was a trend for SETD2 and CLTCL1 mutations to be associated with cases with a personal history of solid tumors (six of the eight cases with CLTCL1 or SETD2 variants had at least one other solid tumor vs. 11/38 cases without a variant in CLTCL1 nor SETD2; p = 0.04; Table S1).
Further assessment of candidate genes was based on the use of two complementary series of controls: an internal control set accounting for potential calling bias (288 non-cancer cases from European ancestries with identical data processing) and an external control set from the exact same ancestry to flag potential population-specific polymorphisms (574 non-disease cases of French origin). No candidate variant could be detected from the internal control set, which suggested that rare variations observed in cases were unlikely to result from technical artifacts. Six variants from five candidate genes (ESAM, SETD2, MTSS2, SMC2, and EBF4) were found in the French external control set, albeit at very low frequencies consistent with those observed in other populations as per current gnomAD annotations. This observation favored the hypothesis of shared (very) rare variants similarly segregating in various populations rather than recently acquired population-specific polymorphisms.

3.4. Pathway Level Analyses Highlighted the Central Role of PI3K/Akt and Its Downstream mTOR/HIF Axis

The most significant enrichment in rare deleterious germline variations was found in PI3KCD and MTOR (FDR q-value ≤ 0.05), two genes that belong to the PIKK protein kinase family, acting along the PI3K/Akt/mTOR axis. Two additional genes among the 13 candidates had documented functions in the same pathway: NRFKB and EP300 (Figure 2). This pathway is closely related to epigenetic modifiers in charge of maintaining genome integrity, such as SETD2 [66]. Overall, a large proportion of mutated cases (14/34 = 41%) had a novel or rare variant affecting at least one of the four PI3K/Akt genes (N = 12) identified from our agnostic approach, or the RCC susceptibility gene TSC1 (N = 2) that belongs to the same axis (Figure 2). Rare deleterious germline variations within the PI3K/Akt pathway (PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300, NFRKB, and TSC1) were consistently mutually exclusive. Of note, PI3K/Akt affected cases tend to have a younger onset of both melanoma (median age of onset at 46 years old for cases with a rare deleterious variant in the PI3K/Akt pathway versus 53.5 years old without, p = 0.15) and RCC (48.5 vs. 55.5 years old, p = 0.07). No significant associations with RCC or melanoma subtypes or MC1R status or with a personal history of cancer were observed.
Pathway enrichment analysis of our 13 candidate genes confirmed direct connections with signaling pathways dysregulated in cancer (Table 5), including signaling cascades downstream of tyrosine kinase receptors notably involved in pancreatic and renal cancer, such as HIF-1 and JAK-STAT signaling pathways. Over-representation was driven by PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300, and SETD2, all known to be involved in RCC development. Although the related gene set size did not allow to reach significance, the melanoma canonical pathway included two of them, namely PIK3CD and EP300 [69,70].

3.5. Relevance of Our Candidate Susceptibility Genes in Malignant Melanoma and RCC

The biological relevance of the 13 novel candidate genes in cancer development was assessed through a dedicated literature search (File S1) combined with a representation of the structural/functional organization of the affected proteins (File S2). In brief, the protein functions associated with our candidate genes mainly pointed to downstream PI3K signaling and genome integrity, with frequent direct implications in CMM and RCC development. A few candidate genes, such as ZBTB21, MTSS2, and EBF4, still have elusive functional mechanisms, while belonging to families of genes with suggested roles in cancer susceptibility. Of note, the NFRKB variant rs200192480 (c.C2113T, p.P705S) was reported as segregating in one family with five members affected by papillary thyroid cancer [67].
In parallel, we checked the occurrence of the 41 identified variants spanning the 13 novel candidate genes in cancer cases from the TCGA series of CMM (SKCM, N = 470) and RCC (KIRC and KIRP, N = 633) [71]. The processing pipeline, including the germline caller, used for the TCGA series was different from that used in our cases: concordant calls are thus unlikely to be technical artefact. In total, 7 of 41 variants (17%) were identified in 16 cases, including 8 SKCM and 8 RCC cases (Table 4). MTOR variant rs142403193, which is located in the PI-kinase FAT domain, was reported four times, affecting two cases in our discovery set and two SKCM cases. As EP300 variant rs201480900 and SETD2 variant rs114719990, it was found at higher frequency in TCGA SKCM series compared to any gnomAD populations. In TCGA series, as in ours, SETD2 variation spanned melanoma and different kidney cancer subtypes, which is in line with the documented broad role of SETD2 in cancer [72,73]. Besides, our set of variants was significantly enriched (p = 0.04) in TCGA relevant series (SKCM, KIRC, and KIRP) compared to TCGA series of known differing etiology that were lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD, N = 540) and lung squamous cell (LUSC, N = 514), while there were no differences in accumulating rare deleterious variants overall. Supplementary Table S3 lists all rare deleterious variants affecting one of the 13 genes in at least one individual from TCGA CMM and/or RCC.
Altogether, our investigations suggested that novel candidate genes may contribute to explain the inherited genetic basis of malignant melanoma and/or RCC.

4. Discussion

We hereby provided a clinical and genetic description of a series of 125 cases affected by both malignant melanoma and RCC.
In line with our initial observations [4], only a minority of the cases (12/125; 9.6%) could be explained by a clinically validated pathogenic variant in one of the two known genes predisposing to both melanoma and RCC, namely MITF (N = 9) and BAP1 (N = 3). In total, 9 out of 125 patients (7.2%) notably displayed the MITF p.E318K germline mutation [21]. Although the role of this variant in melanoma predisposition has been confirmed by numerous reports [74,75,76], its role in RCC susceptibility has not been fully recognized. Two RCC case controls studies were negative [77,78]. However, the first study also failed to find an association with melanoma [77] and the second was performed on FFPE tissue [78]. RCC frequent somatic 3p losses, related to three major RCC tumor suppressor genes, namely VHL (located at 3p25.3), BAP1, and PBRM1 (3p21.1), could have masked germline MITF p.E318K alleles (3p13). Two recent case reports identified this mutation in RCC-only cases, including in a 43 year old African American patient affected with bilateral and multifocal type 1 papillary RCC (PRCCI) whose father developed, at 56 years old, a PRCCI with clear cell features [79,80]. Of note, downstream targets of MITF were deregulated in the PRCCI tumors, documenting in vivo a role of MITF p.E318K variant in renal oncogenesis [80]. Taken together, these results and ours support MITF p.E318K as a risk allele for the development of RCC.
Our three patients carriers of a BAP1 pathogenic mutation that belonged to typical BAP1-tumor predisposition syndrome (TPDS) families with established increased co-susceptibility to RCC and melanoma [81]. An additional five cases displayed clinically pathogenic variant in three genes predisposing to either melanoma or RCC, namely FLCN (N = 2), CDKN2A (N = 2), and PTEN (N = 1). Few case reports raised the question of a possible role of FLCN through the mTOR pathway in CMM susceptibility [82,83], deserving larger studies. Up to date, there is no clear involvement of CDKN2A in RCC susceptibility, while somatic alterations of CDKN2A are relatively frequent in RCC tumors [84]. Germline mutations in PTEN have been associated with an increased risk of a variety of cancer, recently extended to RCC, and to a lesser extent, CMM [85].
To complement our clinical analyses, we implemented an exome-wide agnostic approach in search of rare variants predicted to be functionally impacting and specifically enriched in a subset of 46 unexplained cases among the earliest age of first cancer onset. A large proportion of the whole exome-sequenced cases (15/46) harbor a single rare or novel deleterious germline variant in a gene from the PI3K/Akt signaling cascade: newly identified candidate susceptibility genes included PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300, and NFRKB. The PI3K/Akt pathway is among the most frequently somatically mutated in cancer [86]. Broad activation of the PI3K/Akt signaling is common in both CMM and RCC, with key genes such as MTOR, PTEN, BAP1, PIK3CA frequently harboring somatic mutations, also largely mutually exclusive [86,87,88].
In our series, the PI3K/mTOR axis was targeted in sporadic cases as well as in cases with a positive family history of melanoma. Germline loss of function in regulators of the PI3K/Akt cascade is associated with a range of overgrowth and cancer-predisposing syndromes [89]. Established increased risk of renal cancer and/or melanoma is observed with BAP1 mutations responsible for BAP1-TPDS, PTEN-AKT1/2-PIK3CA induced PTEN-opathies [90], as well as mTOR signaling syndromes such as TSC1/2 tuberous sclerosis complex [91]. Extending clinical testing of familial melanoma cases of unknown etiology to additional targets from the PI3K/Akt family might support clinical management further, especially in the context of PI3K/Akt/mTOR inhibitors being actively considered as therapeutic approaches [92,93].
Downstream of the PI3K/Akt cascade lies the hypoxia-inducible transcriptional factor HIF, specifically highlighted by our pathway enrichment analyses. HIF regulation is targeted in hereditary kidney cancer, and constitutive HIF activation, induced by VHL inactivation, is the major molecular signature of RCC [94]. Based on the initial discovery of MITF p.E318K mutation, confirmed as a recurrent germline mutation in our series, we previously proposed that MITF p.E318K could impair the adaptation of cells to stress and initiate both melanoma and/or RCC tumor formation [21]. Kim and colleagues recently demonstrated that melanoma growth is driven by direct control of MITF by the evolutionary conserved master transcriptional coactivator EP300 [95]. We observed novel or rare deleterious EP300 mutations in three of our wild-type MITF cases. Heterozygous germline EP300 mutations were first described in Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome (RBTS), a congenital neurodevelopmental disorder associated with renal development abnormalities and an increased risk of chronic kidney diseases [96]. The histone acetyltransferase encoded by EP300 is known to initiate hypoxic responses by coupling with the HIF alpha subunit [97], thus enabling the induction of a range of hypoxia-responsive genes critical for tumor angiogenesis, invasion, and immune escape [98,99]. Detailed investigations of the role of the hypoxic tumor microenvironment in melanoma are warranted.
While cancer susceptibility may not be limited to coding regions of the genome, our exome-wide agnostic approach has the advantage to allow the identification of novel susceptibility genes, unlike the majority of cancer susceptibility studies so far limited to a candidate-based approach [100,101]. Overlap among exome/genome-wide studies focusing solely on melanoma or RCC predisposing genes remains limited [101], mostly due to differences in candidate genes/variants prioritization strategies. Nevertheless, most of the new candidates uncovered here are highly conserved genes intolerant to loss of function mutations. Some are directly related to previously identified candidate susceptibility genes, such as EBF family member 4 that shares multiple functional domains with EBF family member 3 suggested to predispose to hereditary melanoma [102]. Other candidates harbored identical rare variants within the TCGA kidney and/or melanoma series, such as MTOR.
The genetic heterogeneity observed in our series is not surprising in the context of susceptibility to complex diseases such as cancer [79,103,104]. The common biological pathways highlighted by our results suggest possible shared co-susceptibility to CMM and RCC and possibly other cancers, like that underlaid by the BAP1 gene. Indeed, candidate genes involved in maintaining genome stability, such as RAE1, SETD2, and CLTCL1 [105,106,107], are attractive candidates for broad cancer susceptibility. Germline mutations in genome integrity keepers have long been recognized as a direct cause of increased cancer risk, as extensively demonstrated in breast cancer [108] as well as cancer-predisposing syndromes [109]. This is in line with our observation of an increased personal history of cancer, including cancer beyond CMM and RCC, in cases with CLTCL1 or SETD2 mutations. Whether some of the susceptibility genes uncovered in our study may or may not be solely related to CMM risk or RCC risk, as the extent of that genetic component in their overall susceptibility, is yet to be documented by dedicated epidemiological studies, that could also investigate potential gene-environment interactions.
As expected in Caucasian populations, the MC1R gene implicated in skin pigmentation was highly polymorphic in our series [110]. Over two-thirds of the patients, irrespective of their status regarding susceptibility genes/candidate genes variations carried at least one MC1R variant. In melanocytes, UVB exposure triggers the interaction of PTEN with wild-type MC1R, but not with functionally deficient variants, leading to Akt inactivation [111]. Actual knowledge about MC1R mainly comes from skin melanocytes, pigmentation, and associated pathologies studies, while MC1R is also expressed in the kidney where its main natural ligand is the adrenocorticotropic hormone; downstream effects include anti-inflammation and immunomodulation to protect kidney cells from various stress [112]. MC1R also interacts with the signal transducer GNAS [113], recently suggested to be tumor-promoting in RCC [114]. Given the similarity of pathways involved in melanoma and RCC biology, a possible role of MC1R variants in renal cell physiology and RCC deserves additional investigations.
The main limitation of this study is the absence of functional validation in cell lines and animal models that could ascertain the biological consequences of the observed rare genetic variations before considering any new target in clinical testing panels. This is of particular relevance in the context of the broad variability of the human germline landscape, including context-dependent mutation rate differences [115]. However, our investigations compiled evidence in favor of bona fide susceptibility genes. First, our discovery phase included a very large set of ancestry-matched non-cancer individuals to control for germline variation load and tolerance to functionally impacting variations. Second, potential technical artifacts, such as coverage or calling bias, were accounted for from our discovery phase onwards. Beyond state-of-the-art data processing and stringent quality criteria, this included manual inspection of candidate variants and their sequence context in cases as well as in internal non-cancer controls processed similarly, and replication at the variant or gene-level within external series based on different sequencing technologies and processing pipelines (FrEx, TCGA). In the absence of corresponding tumor tissues, further in silico functional assessment included comprehensive annotations with a range of pathogenicity scores and curated information on clinical relevance, gene-wide mutational constraint, as well as somatic alterations. Finally, our study design did not allow the assessment of the potential impact of the identified germline alterations on treatment and outcome, warranting further dedicated investigations.

5. Conclusions

Our study highlights that an exome-wide case-control enrichment approach may contribute to better characterize cancer susceptibility grounded on rare variants underexplored to date. Based on our results, germline variations in the PI3K/mTOR signaling cascade are overrepresented in patients diagnosed with both RCC and CMM. Our study pinpoints that both diseases may share molecular pathogenic pathways related to oxidative stress cellular responses, with potential relevance for early detection, diagnosis, and clinical management.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/cancers13092243/s1, Table S1: Clinical and genetic characteristics of the 46 exome-sequenced cases affected by both malignant melanoma and RCC, Table S2: ProxECAT results for 908 genes hosting at least two rare deleterious variants in cases, Table S3: Burden of rare deleterious variants identified from TCGA melanoma and kidney cancer series in the 13 candidate CMM and/or RCC susceptibility genes, Table S4: Set of 41 rare deleterious variants observed in the 13 candidate CMM and/or RCC susceptibility genes with additional annotations, File S1: Relevance of candidate susceptibility genes to cancer development. File S2. Functional organization of the proteins encoded by our 13 candidate susceptibility genes.

Author Contributions

Patient collection: M.-F.A., E.M., and F.J.; conceptualization: B.B.-d.P., E.C., J.-N.H., and V.S.; methodology: V.S. and J.-N.H.; analyses: V.S., J.-N.H., E.C., D.B., M.V., and T.M.D.; validation/interpretation: E.C. and B.B.-d.P.; manuscript writing: J.-N.H., E.C., B.B.-d.P., and V.S.; manuscript review and editing: All; project administration/supervision: E.C. and B.B.-d.P.; resources: J.-F.D., A.B., B.B.-d.P., J.D.M., and P.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

Funding was provided by INCA PAIR Mélanome 2013 (N°2013-1-MELA-05-IGR-1) and Société Française de Dermatologie (AO Sept 2016-1) to B.B.-d.P, as well as IARC/WHO. The recruitment of patients was supported by PHRC 2001 (AOR 01 091) to MFA and B.B.-d.P. (Gustave Roussy Institute), and PHRC2007 (AOM-07-195) to MFA and FD, APHP (Cochin Hospital). We are also grateful for the support of France Génomique infrastructure in the framework of the «Investissements d’Avenir» program of the Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (Contract ANR-10-INBS-09).

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB#00001072) (N°2001-09-05; N°2010-01-09).

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.

Data Availability Statement

The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to research participants and funders for making this study possible. We thank the Gustave Roussy Biobank BB-0033-00074 and the Gustave Roussy Molecular Genetic laboratory members including Vincent Caumette for DNA samples preparation, the molecular geneticist Marine Guillaud-Bataille, Odile Cabaret, and Audrey Remenieras. We thank all the Clinicians who included patients in this study, Caroline Abadie, Jean-Philippe Arnault, Séverine Audebert-Bellanger, Philippe Bahadoran, Patrick Benusiglio, Pascaline Berthet, Françoise Boitier, Marie-Noëlle Bonnet-Dupeyron, Olivier Caron, Chrystelle Colas, Marie-Agnès Collonge-Rame, Isabelle Coupier, Emmanuelle Couty, Stéphane Dalle, François Eisingier, Bernard Escudier, Marion Gauthier-Villars, Marion Gérard, Damien Giacchero, Brigitte Gilbert, Sophie Grandjouan, Florent Grange, Bernard Guillot, Ewa Hainaut-Wierzbicka, Alice Hervieu, Pascal Joly, Sophie Julia, Delphine Kerob, Elodie Lacaze, Sophie Lejeune, Dominique Leroux, Michel Longy, Alain Lortholary, Tanguy Martin-Denavit, Cristina Mateus, Michèle Mathieu, Jessica Moretta, Laurence Olivier-Faivre, Fabien Pelletier, Jean-Luc Perrot, Nicolas Poulalhon, Stéphane Richard, Caroline Robert, Florent Soubrier, Luc Thomas, Pierre Vabres, Laurence Venat-Bouvet, Daniela Zaharia, and Hélène Zattara. We also thank Christopher I. Amos for access to the set of internal controls and Ghislaine Scelo for connecting the clinical teams with the IARC/WHO research team, as well as Matthieu Foll for assisting T.M.D. We are very grateful to Mehdi Khaled, Graham Byrnes, and Liacine Bouaoun for helpful discussion.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Disclaimer

Where authors are identified as personnel of the International Agency for Research on Cancer/World Health Organization, the authors alone are responsible for the views expressed in this article, and they do not necessarily represent the decisions, policy, or views of the International Agency for Research on Cancer/World Health Organization.

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Figure 1. Flow chart of our candidate susceptibility genes discovery approach.
Figure 1. Flow chart of our candidate susceptibility genes discovery approach.
Cancers 13 02243 g001
Figure 2. Overview of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway. Newly identified candidate genes are highlighted in bold. ° Established CMM-predisposing genes. * Established RCC-predisposing genes. RTKs: Receptor tyrosine kinases; H2, H3: histones. This figure was built from the “Pathways in clear cell renal cell carcinoma” pathway [68] hosted on WikiPathways [69].
Figure 2. Overview of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway. Newly identified candidate genes are highlighted in bold. ° Established CMM-predisposing genes. * Established RCC-predisposing genes. RTKs: Receptor tyrosine kinases; H2, H3: histones. This figure was built from the “Pathways in clear cell renal cell carcinoma” pathway [68] hosted on WikiPathways [69].
Cancers 13 02243 g002
Table 1. Characteristics of the 125 patient cases diagnosed with both melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC).
Table 1. Characteristics of the 125 patient cases diagnosed with both melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC).
Demographics
 No. of patients125
 No. of male8064.0%
 No. of female4536.0%
 Age at 1st melanoma diagnosis57.3
 Age at 1st RCC diagnosis58.8
Melanoma features
Melanoma site
 Cutaneous15897.5%
 Ocular10.6%
 Mucosal10.6%
 Unknown21.2%
Histologic subtype for cutaneous melanoma
 Superficial Spreading Melanoma8755.1%
 Nodular Melanoma2113.3%
 Lentigo Malignant Melanoma42.5%
 Acral Lentiginous Melanoma21.3%
 Unclassified74.4%
 Unknown3723.4%
Year of melanoma diagnosisfrom 1984 to 2018
RCC features
RCC type
 Clear cell9372.7%
 Papillary1612.5%
 Chromophobe86.3%
 Other53.9%
 Unknown64.7%
Year of RCC diagnosisfrom 1979 to 2018
Table 2. Characteristics of the 17 patients with pathogenic variants in known melanoma and/or RCC predisposing genes.
Table 2. Characteristics of the 17 patients with pathogenic variants in known melanoma and/or RCC predisposing genes.
Predisposing GeneReference TranscriptNucleotide ChangeAmino Acid
Change
MC1R
Status (Class)
SexAge at First
Melanoma
No.
Melanoma
Melanoma
Histological
Subtype
Age at First RCCRCC
Histological
Subtype
Other
Cancers in
Proband
Cancers in Family
MITFNM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.R163Q (r)Male332SSM27chRCC Uncle: skin cancer
MITF *NM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.V92M (r)Male371SSM55ccRCC
MITF *NM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.V60L (r)
p.R160W (R)
Male621NM51ccRCC
MITF *NM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318KWTMale521SSM52ccRCC Mother: breast cancer
Maternal uncle: colo-rectal cancer
Paternal uncle: leukemia
MITFNM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.R160W (R) p.D294H (R)Female562SSM59ccRCCBasal cell carcinomaMother: RCC + lung cancer
Sister: basal cell carcinoma
MITFNM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.R163Q (r)Male601SSM60chRCCThyroid adenocarcinoma (60)Father: RCC?
MITF *NM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.V60L (r)Male691NM 69ccRCC
MITF *NM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.R160W (R)Male752NM70ccRCC
MITFNM_000248.3c.952G>A p.E318Kp.V92M (r) p.R151C (R)Male743SSM74pRCCBasal cell carcinomaMother: 2 CMM?
Sister: CMM
BAP1NM_004656.3c.37+1delG p.?p.V60L (r)
p.R160W (R)
Female296SSM49ccRCC Father: mesothelioma
Sister: OMM
Brother: CMM + lung cancer (no tobacco)
BAP1NM_004656.3c.78-79delp.V27fsWTMale451NM53ccRCC with a sarcomatoid feature Sister: OMM (53) + lung cancer (53)
Nephew: OMM (18)
Mother: liver cancer (43)
Maternal cousin 1: skin (55) + duodenal cancers (56)
Maternal cousin 2: lung cancer (53)
BAP1NM_004656.3c.1938T>A p.Y646 *p.V60L (r)Female481SSM59ccRCCUrothelial cancer (59)Mother and sister 1: CMM
Sister 2: meningioma
CDKN2ANM_000077.4c.146T>Gp.I49Sp.V92M (r) p.R151C (R)Female311SMM 36ccRCC Mother and sister: CMM
CDKN2ANM_000077.4c.159G>Cp.M53Ip.V60L (r) p.R151C (R) Male461NM61ccRCC Mother and brother: CMM
FLCNNM_144997.6 c.663dupG p.M222fsWTFemale481NM43chRCC with oncocytoma componentsLeiomyosarcomaFather: lung cancer
Paternal uncle: RCC
FLCNNM_144997.6c.755dupC p.C253fsWTMale641SSM62ccRCCCutaneous fibrofolliculoma
PTENNM_000314.6c.959T>Gp.L320*WTFemale551SSM 55ccRCC Daughter: ALM (25) with PTEN+
* already included in [21]. R: moderate-risk variant in melanoma [35]; r: low-risk variant in melanoma [35]; OMM: oral malignant melanoma; CMM: cutaneous malignant melanoma; ALM: acral lentiginous melanoma.
Table 3. Candidate susceptibility genes enriched in rare variants predicted to be deleterious among 46 French cases with CMM and RCC compared to ancestry-matched cancer-free controls.
Table 3. Candidate susceptibility genes enriched in rare variants predicted to be deleterious among 46 French cases with CMM and RCC compared to ancestry-matched cancer-free controls.
HGNC Gene SymbolGene DescriptionGene Length (pb)LOEUF Mutational Constraint a Rare b Deleterious Allele Countsp-Value cq-Value d
Internal Cases
(N = 46)
External Controls
(N = 19,751)
PIK3CDPhosphatidylinositol-4,5-Bisphosphate 3-Kinase Catalytic Subunit Delta63330.202682 × 10−50.04
MTORMechanistic Target of Rapamycin Kinase12,1630.1842524 × 10−50.05
RAE1Ribonucleic Acid Export 156420.192188 × 10−50.08
ZBTB21Zinc Finger and BTB Domain Containing 2180620.2531202 × 10−40.12
ESAMEndothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule29200.592372 × 10−40.12
TMEM192Transmembrane Protein 19210,1821.292303 × 10−40.13
CLTCL1Clathrin Heavy Chain Like 110,0520.8064383 × 10−40.13
NFRKBNuclear Factor Related to KappaB Binding Protein63350.3732333 × 10−40.13
EP300E1A Binding Protein P30011,6920.1032664 × 10−40.15
MTSS2MTSS I-BAR Domain Containing 249860.3142064 × 10−40.15
SETD2SET Domain Containing 2, Histone Lysine Methyltransferase10,2450.2155056 × 10−40.16
SMC2Structural Maintenance of Chromosomes 264700.2341316 × 10−40.17
EBF4EBF Family Member 435410.703728 × 10−40.18
a Continuous gene-level mutational constraint metric (loss-of-function observed/expected upper bound fraction) [44]: low LOEUF scores indicate strong selection against predicted loss-of-function variation in the given protein-coding gene. Scores below 0.35 are indicated in bold. b Allele frequency ≤ 0.25%, that is MITF p.E318K allele frequency in European population. c ProxECAT enrichment test weighted statistics [47] using genomic control factor to take into account population stratification [48]. d Benjamini–Hochberg false-discovery rate [49]; cut-off for statistical significance: q < 0.2.
Table 4. Set of 41 rare deleterious variants observed in the 13 candidate CMM and/or RCC susceptibility genes identified by gene-based case-control enrichment test.
Table 4. Set of 41 rare deleterious variants observed in the 13 candidate CMM and/or RCC susceptibility genes identified by gene-based case-control enrichment test.
ChrStartEndRefAltHGNC Gene SymbolAccession NumberReference TranscriptNucleotide ChangeAmino acid ChangeCADDAF_CasesAF_
FrEx
AF_nc_nweAF_PopmaxIndependent Cancer Series *
197156479715647AGPIK3CD.NM_005026c.A248Gp.E83G250.01...
197157099715709CTPIK3CD.NM_005026c.C310Tp.R104C350.01.3 × 10−59 × 10−6
11113064111130641GAMTORrs142403193NM_004958c.C5501Tp.T1834M22.80.02.9 × 10−47 × 10−4SKCM (2)
11123852211238522GAMTORrs751242124NM_004958c.C1882Tp.R628C28.90.01..5 × 10−5
11124803011248030TAMTORrs761323069NM_004958c.A905Tp.D302V23.10.01..3 × 10−4
205736538157365381CTRAE1rs755561880NM_003610c.C314Tp.S105L310.01..6 × 10−5
205736543257365432AGRAE1.NM_003610c.A365Gp.Q122R20.60.01...
214199134041991340GAZBTB21rs368359632NM_001098402c.C2756Tp.T919M25.30.01..7 × 10−4
214199205841992058GAZBTB21rs371004245NM_001098402c.C2038Tp.R680C26.50.01.1 × 10−41 × 10−4
214199276241992762CTZBTB21.NM_001098402c.G1334Ap.R445H300.01.5 × 10−54 × 10−5
11124753942124753942GAESAMrs760488150NM_138961c.C877Tp.R293W340.01.5 × 10−53 × 10−5
11124754658124754658GAESAMrs200924772NM_138961c.C713Tp.T238M330.019 × 10−48 × 10−52 × 10−4
4165103020165103020TGTMEM192.NM_001100389c.A104Cp.Q35P22.90.01...
4165103021165103021GATMEM192.NM_001100389c.C103Tp.Q35X350.01...
221921045919210459CTCLTCL1rs781878409NM_007098c.G3116Ap.R1039Q320.01..1 × 10−3
221921992919219929CTCLTCL1rs188611399NM_007098c.G2875Ap.V959I25.50.01.2 × 10−41 × 10−3KIRP (2)
221922400619224006TGCLTCL1rs782728804NM_007098c.A2177Cp.D726A29.50.01..9 × 10−6
221922634619226346TCCLTCL1rs201280856NM_007098c.A1820Gp.H607R25.50.01.3 × 10−44 × 10−4
221923326419233264CACLTCL1rs782774942NM_007098c.G1423Tp.A475S23.60.01..6 × 10−5
221923467219234672AGCLTCL1.NM_007098c.T1004Cp.V335A25.30.01...
11129872957129872957GANFRKB.NM_006165c.C2765Tp.P922L310.01...
11129874521129874521GANFRKBrs200192480NM_006165c.C2113Tp.P705S23.90.01..4 × 10−5fNTMC (1 family)
11129884816129884816GANFRKBrs755726394NM_006165c.C746Tp.A249V22.90.01..6 × 10−5
224111780841117808CTEP300.NM_001429c.C716Tp.P239L21.30.01...
224113772441137724CTEP300.NM_001429c.C1694Tp.T565I24.90.01...
224114914741149147CTEP300rs201480900NM_001429c.C2351Tp.P784L23.20.01.8 × 10−52 × 10−4SKCM (1)
167066376570663765GAMTSS2rs749003640NM_138383c.C2156Tp.P719L24.50.01.2 × 10−41 × 10−3KIRP (1)
167066461570664615TCMTSS2rs147433916NM_138383c.A1454Gp.D485G23.90.012 × 10−32 × 10−42 × 10−3SKCM (1)
167066504470665044CTMTSS2rs549028223NM_138383c.G1181Ap.R394Q26.10.01.5 × 10−52 × 10−3
167067982070679820CGMTSS2rs768341867NM_138383c.G348Cp.K116N29.10.01..9 ×10−6
34704650947046509CTSETD2rs766193321NM_001349370c.G6944Ap.G2315E330.01.3 × 10−59 × 10−6
34704654347046543GTSETD2.NM_001349370c.C6910Ap.P2304T25.90.01...
34708411447084114AGSETD2rs148097513NM_001349370c.T5534Cp.M1845T25.30.019 × 10−41 × 10−32 × 10−3KIRC (3)–KIRP (1)–SKCM (1)
34712140747121407TCSETD2rs114719990NM_001349370c.A3097Gp.T1033A23.60.012 × 10−32 × 10−32 × 10−3SKCM (3)–KIRP (1)
34712330847123308CGSETD2.NM_001349370c.G1196Cp.R399T25.80.01...
9104114033104114033CTSMC2.NM_001042550c.C1484Tp.T495I20.60.01...
9104125007104125007GASMC2rs147960477NM_001042550c.G2353Ap.A785T230.029 × 10−42 × 10−49 × 10−4
9104139220104139220AGSMC2.NM_001042550c.A3499Gp.T1167A23.90.01...
2027060202706020GAEBF4rs202097996NM_001110514c.G329Ap.R110Q210.019 × 10−46 × 10−51 × 10−4
2027062112706211CAEBF4.NM_001110514c.C349Ap.L117M23.30.01...
2027557492755749GAEBF4rs369331115NM_001110514c.G1651Ap.A551T320.01...
Variants are ordered by ascending q-values of the candidate gene they belong to, that is, the Benjamini–Hochberg corrected ProxECAT-weighted statistics [47] from the gene-based test of enrichment in rare (AF ≤ 0.25%) exonic variants predicted to be deleterious in our series of 46 cases with CMM and RCC compared to external controls. Within a given gene, variants are ordered by ascending genome positions in GRCh38 (ANNOVAR annotations) [41]. * Occurrences in RCC and/or CMM TCGA series (KIRC, kidney renal clear cell carcinoma, N = 344; KIRP, kidney renal papillary cell carcinoma, N = 289; SKCM, skin cutaneous melanoma, N = 470—https://www.cancer.gov/tcga accessed on 25 January 2021) and/or familial cancer series (fNTMC, familial non-medullary thyroid cancer) [67], with the number of occurrence(s) between brackets for TCGA series and the number of affected families in which the variant segregates for familial cancer series. CADD: Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion score [45]; AF: allele frequency; AF_cases: AF in internal cases (N = 46); AF_FrEx: AF in the French reference panel ‘French Exome Project’ (N = 574, http://lysine.univ-brest.fr/FrExAC accessed on 25 January 2021); AF_controls: AF in the gnomAD non cancer samples [43,44] of north-western European ancestry (used as external controls in ProxECAT enrichment test, N = 19,751); AF_popmax: highest AF across all gnomAD v2.1.1 outbred populations exome (N = 125,748) and genome data (N = 15,708). An extended version of this table, including pseudonymized patient identifiers, is available as Supplementary Table S4.
Table 5. Biological pathways associated with the 13 candidate susceptibility genes identified in 46 French cases diagnosed with both CMM and RCC.
Table 5. Biological pathways associated with the 13 candidate susceptibility genes identified in 46 French cases diagnosed with both CMM and RCC.
Pathway IDPathway Descriptionq-Value *Number of Genes in PathwayCandidate Genes in Pathway
KEGG:05215Prostate cancer2.8 × 10−397PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
KEGG:04066HIF-1 signaling pathway4 × 10−3109PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
KEGG:04935Growth hormone synthesis, secretion and action5.1 × 10−3118PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
KEGG:04919Thyroid hormone signaling pathway5.5 × 10−3121PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
WP:WP4018Pathways in clear cell renal cell carcinoma7.7 × 10−386MTOR, EP300, SETD2
KEGG:04630JAK-STAT signaling pathway1.3 × 10−2162PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
KEGG:05164Influenza A1.5 × 10−2169PIK3CD, RAE1, EP300
WP:WP3287Overview of nanoparticle effects1.6 × 10−219PIK3CD, NFRKB
KEGG:05167Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus infection2.2 × 10−2193PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
WP:WP4217Ebola Virus Pathway on Host2.6 × 10−2129PIK3CD, CLTCL1, EP300
KEGG:04930Type II diabetes mellitus3.1 × 10−245PIK3CD, MTOR
WP:WP4874CAMKK2 Pathway5 × 10−233MTOR, EP300
WP:WP4241Type 2 papillary renal cell carcinoma5.3 × 10−234EP300, SETD2
KEGG:04213Longevity regulating pathway—multiple species5.7 × 10−261PIK3CD, MTOR
KEGG:05221Acute myeloid leukemia6.9 × 10−267PIK3CD, MTOR
KEGG:05211Renal cell carcinoma7.1 × 10−268PIK3CD, EP300
KEGG:05230Central carbon metabolism in cancer7.5 × 10−270PIK3CD, MTOR
KEGG:05016Huntington disease8.4 × 10−2306MTOR, CLTCL1, EP300
KEGG:05214Glioma8.6 × 10−275PIK3CD, MTOR
KEGG:05206MicroRNAs in cancer8.8 × 10−2310PIK3CD, MTOR, EP300
KEGG:05212Pancreatic cancer8.8 × 10−276PIK3CD, MTOR
KEGG:05100Bacterial invasion of epithelial cells9.1 × 10−277PIK3CD, CLTCL1
KEGG:01521EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor resistance9.5 × 10−279PIK3CD, MTOR
* Top enriched pathways (q < 0.1) from Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) and WikiPathways (WP) using g:Profiler functional enrichment analyses with g:SCS multiple testing correction as per latest recommendations [53].
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Hubert, J.-N.; Suybeng, V.; Vallée, M.; Delhomme, T.M.; Maubec, E.; Boland, A.; Bacq, D.; Deleuze, J.-F.; Jouenne, F.; Brennan, P.; et al. The PI3K/mTOR Pathway Is Targeted by Rare Germline Variants in Patients with Both Melanoma and Renal Cell Carcinoma. Cancers 2021, 13, 2243. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092243

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Hubert J-N, Suybeng V, Vallée M, Delhomme TM, Maubec E, Boland A, Bacq D, Deleuze J-F, Jouenne F, Brennan P, et al. The PI3K/mTOR Pathway Is Targeted by Rare Germline Variants in Patients with Both Melanoma and Renal Cell Carcinoma. Cancers. 2021; 13(9):2243. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092243

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Hubert, Jean-Noël, Voreak Suybeng, Maxime Vallée, Tiffany M. Delhomme, Eve Maubec, Anne Boland, Delphine Bacq, Jean-François Deleuze, Fanélie Jouenne, Paul Brennan, and et al. 2021. "The PI3K/mTOR Pathway Is Targeted by Rare Germline Variants in Patients with Both Melanoma and Renal Cell Carcinoma" Cancers 13, no. 9: 2243. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092243

APA Style

Hubert, J. -N., Suybeng, V., Vallée, M., Delhomme, T. M., Maubec, E., Boland, A., Bacq, D., Deleuze, J. -F., Jouenne, F., Brennan, P., McKay, J. D., Avril, M. -F., Bressac-de Paillerets, B., & Chanudet, E. (2021). The PI3K/mTOR Pathway Is Targeted by Rare Germline Variants in Patients with Both Melanoma and Renal Cell Carcinoma. Cancers, 13(9), 2243. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092243

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