作者
Zhe Hu,Zimeng Wu,Wei Liu,Yan Ning,Jingbo Liu,Wencheng Ding,Junpeng Fan,Shuyan Cai,Qinlan Li,Wenting Li,Xiaohang Yang,Yingyu Dou,Sheng Wang,Wenju Peng,Funian Lu,Xucui Zhuang,Tianyu Qin,Xiaoyan Kang,Chenzhao Feng,Zhiying Xu,Qiaoying Lv,Qian Wang,Chao Wang,Xinyu Wang,Zhiqi Wang,Jianliu Wang,Jie Jiang,Beibei Wang,Gordon B. Mills,Ding Ma,Qinglei Gao,Kezhen Li,Gang Chen,Xiaojun Chen,Chaoyang Sun
摘要
Endometrial carcinoma remains a public health concern with a growing incidence, particularly in younger women. Preserving fertility is a crucial consideration in the management of early-onset endometrioid endometrial carcinoma (EEEC), particularly in patients under 40 who maintain both reproductive desire and capacity. To illuminate the molecular characteristics of EEEC, we undertook a large-scale multi-omics study of 215 patients with endometrial carcinoma, including 81 with EEEC. We reveal an unexpected association between exposome-related mutational signature and EEEC, characterized by specific CTNNB1 and SIGLEC10 hotspot mutations and disruption of downstream pathways. Interestingly, SIGLEC10Q144K mutation in EEECs resulted in aberrant SIGLEC-10 protein expression and promoted progestin resistance by interacting with estrogen receptor alpha. We also identified potential protein biomarkers for progestin response in fertility-sparing treatment for EEEC. Collectively, our study establishes a proteogenomic resource of EEECs, uncovering the interactions between exposome and genomic susceptibilities that contribute to the development of primary prevention and early detection strategies for EEECs. This study of Chinese endometrioid endometrial carcinomas describes the proteogenomic differences between early-onset and late-onset tumors, finding that SIGLEC10 mutation may contribute to tumorigenesis and progestin resistance in early cases.