Exploring Co-occurring POLE Exonuclease and Non-exonuclease Domain Mutations and Their Impact on Tumor Mutagenicity

Shreya M. Shah & Sanjeevani Arora et al. · 2024-01-08

Abstract

POLE driver mutations in the exonuclease domain (ExoD driver) are prevalent in several cancers, including colorectal cancer and endometrial cancer, leading to dramatically ultra-high tumor mutation burden (TMB). To understand whether POLE mutations that are not classified as drivers (POLE Variant) contribute to mutagenesis, we assessed TMB in 447 POLE-mutated colorectal cancers, endometrial cancers, and ovarian cancers classified as TMB-high ≥10 mutations/Mb (mut/Mb) or TMB-low <10 mut/Mb. TMB was significantly highest in tumors with “POLE ExoD driver plus POLE Variant” (colorectal cancer and endometrial cancer, P < 0.001; ovarian cancer, P < 0.05). TMB increased with additional POLE variants (P < 0.001), but plateaued at 2, suggesting an association between the presence of these variants and TMB. Integrated analysis of AlphaFold2 POLE models and quantitative stability estimates predicted the impact of multiple POLE variants on POLE functionality. The prevalence of immunogenic neoepitopes was notably higher in the “POLE ExoD driver plus POLE Variant” tumors. Overall, this study reveals a novel correlation between POLE variants in POLE ExoD-driven tumors, and ultra-high TMB. Currently, only select pathogenic ExoD mutations with a reliable association with ultra-high TMB inform clinical practice. Thus, these findings are hypothesis-generating, require functional validation, and could potentially inform tumor classification, treatment responses, and clinical outcomes.

Significance:

Somatic POLE ExoD driver mutations cause proofreading deficiency that induces high TMB. This study suggests a novel modifier role for POLE variants in POLE ExoD-driven tumors, associated with ultra-high TMB. These data, in addition to future functional studies, may inform tumor classification, therapeutic response, and patient outcomes.

Funding

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA006927

NIGMS NIH HHS

R35 GM122517

NCI NIH HHS

UH2 CA271230

HHS | National Institutes of Health

P30 CA006927

HHS | National Institutes of Health

R35 GM122517

American Cancer Society

HHS | National Institutes of Health

UH2CA271230-01

U.S. Department of Defense

W81XWH-18-1-0148

HHS | National Institutes of Health

CEP Award (Yale Head and Neck Cancer NIH SPORE)

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

PID2020-112595RB-I00 and predoctoral fellowship to JV-E

MEC | Instituto de Salud Carlos III

CIBERONC CB16/12/00234

Generalitat de Catalunya

AGAUR 2017SGR1282,CERCA Program