Background

Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder caused by biallelic inactivating variants in the ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) gene. The phenotype is characterised by progressive neuronal degeneration, immunological deficiency, genetic instability, hypersensitivity to ionising radiation and agents that cause DNA double-strand breaks, and a predisposition to malignancies, particularly lymphoid tumours [1,2,3]. Epidemiological studies on A-T families showed that heterozygous ATM deleterious variant carriers (hereafter referred to as HetAT) are also at increased risk of other cancer types [4,5,6], notably of breast cancer (BC) in female relatives [7, 8]. It is estimated that 0.5% to 1% of the general population are HetAT, and studies conducted in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC) families or early-onset BC cases showed that deleterious ATM alleles confer a two- to four-fold increase in BC risk for carriers as compared with non-carriers [9, 10]. Therefore, most published case-control studies or family-based studies described such ATM alleles as moderate-risk BC susceptibility alleles, although this risk may differ according to the type of variant [9, 10]. Consequently, ATM is now included in nearly all multigene panels used for HBOC genetic testing that include, in addition to BRCA1 and BRCA2, other moderate- to high-risk genes coding for tumour suppressor proteins acting in critical processes of DNA repair pathways [11]. However, results of ATM testing are usually not issued to patients, owing to the imprecise absolute risk estimates and a lack of management recommendations for ATM variant carriers and their relatives [11]. Nevertheless, National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines recommend an annual screening mammogram and annual MRI with contrast enhancement beginning at age 40, or earlier based on family BC history for HetAT women [12]. Moreover, Australia has national best practice guidelines addressing the variant c.7271T>G; these guidelines are based on those that apply to the management of BC risk in BRCA2 deleterious variant carriers [13, 14]. If a consensus was made to define ATM as a gene with clinical utility, specific pathological and genomic features associated with ATM inactivation in tumours could help identify subjects with no strong personal or family history of BC. A genetic test for ATM may thus be offered to them and their relatives and thereby direct those individuals towards effective cancer risk management and therapeutic strategies.

So far, no clear histopathological and molecular features have been described for ATM-associated breast tumours (i.e., tumours developed by subjects carrying one or two mutated copies of ATM), and well-documented ATM tumour series are very limited. Researchers in three Australian studies on familial BC investigated breast tumours developed by HetAT participants carrying either a truncating variant (TV) or a missense variant (essentially the c.7271T>G; p.Val2424Gly variant) [13, 15]. The first two studies, carried out on 21 and 35 tumours, respectively, suggested that histologically, breast tumours from HetAT subjects do not resemble the tumours from BRCA1 mutation carriers [15], and no difference was observed between the histological grade of ATM-associated tumours and a series of age-matched control tumours [13]. The third study, focusing on six tumours from carriers of the c.7271T>G variant, revealed that all tumours presented with the luminal A or B molecular subtype [16]. Finally, no consistent pattern of loss of the normal allele was reported in an Australian series (N = 17) or in a French series (N = 16) of tumours from carriers of putative BC-associated ATM variants [13, 17].

The purpose of the present study was to determine whether breast tumours developed by ATM variant carriers show distinctive histopathological and genomic features as compared with ‘sporadic’ tumours, and also whether they resemble the breast tumours described in carriers of a deleterious variant of other known BC susceptibility genes, in particular the BRCA1-associated phenotype [18]. To this end, we conducted a pathology review of a series of tumours composed of 3 breast tumours from 3 A-T subjects (who were therefore homozygous or compound heterozygous ATM variant carriers), 20 tumours from 18 HetAT subjects from A-T families, and 18 tumours from 18 HetAT subjects from HBOC families who were non-carriers of other known high-risk variants. We also performed single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array genomic profiling to assess somatic loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the ATM locus and to investigate absolute copy number and LOH profiles at the genome-wide level. Finally, to complete the repertoire of somatic alterations of ATM-associated breast tumours, we performed whole-genome sequencing (WGS) on four tumours from HetAT participants with available frozen material.

Methods

Study participants and tumour material

Breast tumour samples were selected from carriers of a deleterious ATM variant from four different research resources: the French retrospective study on A-T families (Retro-AT) [19], the French prospective cohort on women related to an A-T child (CoF-AT) [8], the GENESIS study [20] and the Kathleen Cuningham Foundation Consortium for research into Familial Breast Cancer (kConFab) study [21]. Briefly, Retro-AT [19] was carried out between 1994 and 1997 to assess cancer risk in A-T families living in France. Thirty-four A-T families were identified during this period, and 27 of them were subsequently included in the CoF-AT prospective study. CoF-AT is an ongoing national prospective cohort study of A-T families which was initiated in 2003 to investigate environmental and genetic risk factors for BC in HetAT and non-HetAT (i.e., non-carriers of an ATM variant) women. All women aged 18 and over were eligible to participate in the study. At inclusion, participants provided a blood sample to determine whether they carried one of the ATM-inactivating variants identified in the A-T child of the family. As of June 2017, 415 women (213 HetAT and 202 non-HetAT) belonging to 105 A-T families had been enrolled in CoF-AT, and 37 study participants from Retro-AT or CoF-AT had developed BC, including 23 HetAT women, 11 non-HetAT women and 3 A-T subjects having inherited two inactivated copies of ATM (2 females and 1 male). Breast tumour material from the 3 A-T subjects and from 18 HetAT subjects could be retrieved for the present study (Table 1).

Table 1 Clinical characteristics of ATM mutation carriers, and available tumour material used for analyses

GENESIS is a national study on HBOC families identified through French family cancer clinics [20]. Index cases were women diagnosed with invasive mammary carcinoma or in situ ductal carcinoma, having at least one sister affected with BC, and with a negative test result for a pathogenic variant in BRCA1 and BRCA2. ATM carriers of a TV or of a rare likely deleterious missense substitution (MS) were identified during the course of a large-scale case-control mutation-screening study (F. Lesueur, PhD, unpublished data, March 2018). Tumour material from 11 of them was assessed in the present study (Table 1). In addition, we investigated tumours from seven HetAT subjects enrolled in the Australian kConFab study [21] (Table 1).

Selection of ATM variant carriers

Individuals included in the study were either homozygous, compound heterozygous or heterozygous carriers of a variant considered pathogenic for A-T disorder. We also selected HetAT BC participants from HBOC families carrying a TV that had not necessarily been reported in A-T families, as well as carriers of a rare likely deleterious MS classified as C65, C55 or C45 according to the Align-GVGD tool as previously described [10, 22]. Carriers of the p.Val2424Gly variant identified in kConFab were not included in this study, because tumour characteristics of carriers of this variant had been already investigated [13, 15, 16]. In total, 41 tumour tissues were available from 3 A-T and 36 HetAT subjects for histopathological review (Table 1).

Pathology review

The Hematoxylin and Eosin Stained (HES) breast tumour tissue was reviewed and scored for morphology features and graded by two pathologists (AVS and GB) using the modified system of Elston et al. [23]. The World Health Organisation classification of tumours of the breast was used to determine histological subtype of ATM-associated tumours, and TNM stage according to tumour size, nodal infiltration and metastasis status [24]. Oestrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status, as well as the expression of proliferating marker Ki-67, was obtained from histopathology reports held by diagnostic laboratories. When incomplete, hormonal status was determined by immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining at Institut Curie. Tumours were considered HER2+ if they were scored 3+ by IHC or for tumours scored 2+ by IHC if fluorescence in situ hybridisation showed an HER2 gene amplification. Tumours were classified using IHC data according to the St. Gallen molecular subtypes as follows: triple-negative (ER−, PR− and HER2−), HER2-overexpressing (ER−, PR− and HER2+), luminal A (ER+, PR+/−, HER2− and Ki-67 < 20%), luminal B (ER+, PR+/−, HER2− and Ki-67 ≥ 20%), and luminal B/HER2+ (ER+, PR+/−, HER2+ and Ki-67 ≥ 20%) [25].

Morphological features of ATM-associated breast tumours were compared with the series of breast tumours from patients who had surgery at Institut Curie between 2005 and 2006, named the PICBIM series (from the programme incitatif et collaboratif - Cancer du sein: invasion et motilité). None of the PICBIM patients received neoadjuvant treatment. Patients who had developed a previous cancer at any site were excluded, as were known BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers. In this series, ATM mutation status of participants had not been determined. In total, 516 patients diagnosed with invasive carcinoma and 83 patients diagnosed with in situ carcinoma served as control subjects.

DNA preparation and confirmation of the familial ATM deleterious variant

Tumour DNA was extracted from tumour-enriched areas (with ≥ 50% tumour content when possible) delimited from the most representative HES-stained slides for the 35 tumours for which formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) material was available (Table 1). The relevant areas were macrodissected from four 10-μm sections, and DNA was purified using the NucleoSpin Tissue protocol according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Macherey-Nagel, Düren, Germany). DNA quantity and quality were assessed using a Qubit fluorometer (Life Technologies/Thermo Fisher Scientific, Carlsbad, CA, USA) and SYBR Green-based qPCR assay (Promega, Madison, WI, USA). Of the 35 available FFPE tumour DNA samples, sufficient quantity and quality to perform subsequent molecular analyses were obtained for 23 of them. Matched blood DNA was extracted with the QuickGene-610L automated system (AutoGen, Holliston, MA, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The presence of the familial ATM deleterious variant was confirmed in all analysable blood and tumour DNA samples by Sanger targeted sequencing on the Applied Biosystems ABI 3500xL DNA analyser (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Forest City, CA, USA).

Copy number variation analysis

Copy number variation (CNV) analysis using the Affymetrix OncoScan SNP array (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Santa Clara, CA, USA) was performed on the 23 FFPE ATM-associated tumours, including 2 tumours from 2 A-T participants (Table 1). Data were analysed with the Genome Alteration Print (GAP) method, which takes into account both ploidy and large-scale genomic rearrangements [18, 26]. Copy number ranged from zero to eight copies, and all segments exceeding eight copies were ascribed eight-copy status. Chromosome number was estimated by the sum of the copy numbers detected at the peri-centric regions. Output processing files derived from the GAP tool were analysed using VAMP in-house software [27] to define the boundaries of regions recurrently altered in ATM-mutated tumours. Copy loss and gain for near-diploid tumours were called for the segments with zero or one copy and four or more copies, respectively. Copy loss and gain for near-tetraploid tumours were called for the segments with less than or equal to two and six or more copies, respectively. LOH status was ascribed to regions having monoallelic content, regardless of copy number. LOH associated with copy loss was referred as LOH/loss. Breakpoints (changes in the copy number or major allele counts within chromosomes) in each genomic profile were characterised on the basis of resulting absolute copy number profile and after filtering for regions with < 50 SNP variations. Recurrent alterations (CNV, LOH) among the cohort were obtained using the CNTools R package (version 1.24.0; R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria) and a homemade script. In order to find inherent grouping structure, hierarchical clustering was performed using the alteration status (absence/presence of an alteration) per segment using the Jaccard distance and the Ward linkage function, available in the vegan R package (version 2.3-3).

Validation of LOH status at ATM locus using microsatellites

Tumour and matched blood DNA were evaluated on a subset of participants by using a PCR-based LOH assay with four fluorescence-labelled microsatellite markers (namely D11S1113, D11S1819, D11S2179 and D11S1778) spanning a 14.4-Mbp region encompassing the MRE11A and ATM genes. Capillary electrophoresis was performed on the ABI 3500xL DNA analyser. Raw electrophoretic data were analysed with GeneMarker software version 1.3 (SoftGenetics, LLC, State College, PA, USA) to assess allele ratios. We considered LOH at the ATM locus when the allele ratio fell below 50% in the tumour DNA sample.

Whole-genome sequencing

WGS was performed on four tumour-normal DNA pairs from three participants for whom frozen tumour tissue was available (Table 1). Paired-end libraries were prepared from 2 μg of DNA using the TruSeq DNA PCR-Free Low-Throughput Sample Preparation Kit (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) and were sequenced on the HiSeq 2500 instrument (Illumina). Tumour DNA was sequenced at a higher depth of coverage (100×) than the germline counterpart (30×). Sequencing reads were mapped to the reference genome (assembly hg19) using Burroughs-Wheeler Aligner (version 0.7.5a) [28]. Regions of CNV and LOH were identified using the FACETS algorithm (version 0.5.6) [29], and single-nucleotide variations (SNVs) and indels were called using VarScan 2 [30]. Somatic variants were filtered and annotated using an in-house pipeline.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analyses were performed using STATA version 14.1 software (StataCorp, College Station, TX, USA). Two-tailed tests with a 5% significance level were used throughout. Logistic regressions were used to assess the level of association between the presence of an ATM variant and various features of interest when comparing the ATM series with the PICBIM series. Fisher’s exact test (FET) was used to assess molecular subtype differences between ATM-associated tumours and breast tumours from sporadic cases from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) [31] and from the Norwegian series [32].

Results

Histopathological features associated with ATM variant status

Clinicopathological and IHC features were evaluated on 3 breast tumours from 3 A-T participants and 38 tumours from 36 HetAT participants. This tumour series was compared with BC cases enrolled in the PICBIM program of Institut Curie. An overview of the features examined in both series is presented in Table 2.

Table 2 Clinical and histological features of ATM-associated invasive breast carcinomas compared with those of sporadic cases

Among the 41 reviewed ATM-associated breast tumours, 36 were invasive carcinomas and 5 were in situ carcinomas. Overall, subjects with invasive carcinoma and subjects with in situ carcinoma from the ATM series tend to be diagnosed at a younger age than subjects from the PICBIM series (mean age 52.4 vs. 56.2 years, P = 0.08 for invasive carcinomas; 45.5 vs. 54.1 years, P = 0.07 for in situ carcinomas). This can be explained by the fact that women related to an A-T child or belonging to an HBOC family are more likely to benefit from early detection of the disease owing to their higher risk of developing BC than the general population. We also compared mean age at diagnosis in participants who developed invasive breast carcinoma between the studies, and we observed no difference (CoF-AT/Retro-AT 51.9, GENESIS 55.9, kConFab 50.6, P = 0.90).

Invasive breast carcinomas developed by HetAT and A-T participants were mostly ductal carcinomas (86%) with an intermediate to high grade (II–III), which was the same as the distribution of histological types and grades found in the invasive tumours from the PICBIM series. With respect to the IHC of tumours arising in ATM variant carriers, 97% of ATM-associated tumours were ER+, which was significantly higher than the proportion of ER+ tumours in the PICBIM series (59%, P = 0.004). Low to moderate lymphocytic infiltration was observed in ATM-associated tumours (data not shown), but this information was not available in the PICBIM, so no comparison could be performed.

Molecular subtypes could be determined for 28 of 36 ATM-associated invasive breast tumours. ATM-associated breast tumours were mostly luminal B (46%) and luminal A (36%), and the distribution of the molecular subtypes differed significantly from that of the PICBIM series. In particular the luminal B and luminal B/HER2+ subtypes were over-represented among tumours developed by HetAT and A-T participants (P = 0.009 and P = 0.005, respectively) (Table 2). Because the PICBIM series might not reflect the distribution of the molecular subtypes of invasive breast tumours in the general population, we also compared the ATM series with a series of 1423 primary breast tumours from a Norwegian population-based survey of women born between 1886 and 1977 [32], as well as with 501 invasive breast tumours characterised with the PAM50 test [33, 34] available in TCGA, after exclusion of carriers of a TV in BRCA1, BRCA2 and ATM [31]. We found that the proportion of luminal B tumours was also significantly higher in ATM-associated tumours than in the Norwegian study (PFET = 0.03) and in the TCGA series (PFET = 0.02), whereas the prevalence rates of luminal B/HER2+ tumours and of triple-negative breast tumours in the two latter series were similar to those observed in ATM-associated tumours (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Distribution of molecular subtypes in the ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) series and in the three control series. PAM50 classification was used for The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) data, which explains the absence of luminal B/Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive (HER2+) tumours in this series. Fisher’s exact test was used to assess difference between ATM series and control series. PICBIM Programme incitatif et collaboratif - Cancer du sein: invasion et motilité series

We next performed two sensitivity tests. First, analyses comparing clinical and histological features of ATM-associated tumours with those of the PICBIM series were repeated after exclusion of four ATM-associated invasive breast tumours, three of which were second primary tumours (T0016-L, T0173-R and T0179-L) whose morphology and histology might have been affected by treatment of the first primary BC. The fourth tumour (T0077-L) was from a patient with synchronous bilateral tumours (T0077-R and T0077-L); we randomly excluded one of the two tumours to take into account only one tumour per patient in the analysis. The results remained unchanged (Table 2).

Second, we repeated the analyses after exclusion of five invasive tumours developed by carriers of a missense variant not reported so far as pathogenic for A-T, namely c.1464G>T (p.Trp488Cys), c.5750G>C (p.Arg1917Thr), c.8158G>C (p.Asp2720His), c.8614C>A (p.His2872Asn) and c.9008A>T (p.Asn3003Ile), to avoid possible misclassification of the deleterious effect of the variant based on in silico prediction only. Again, the results remained unchanged (Table 2).

We also compared features of the five in situ carcinomas (two ER+, two ER− and one with undetermined ER status) of the ATM series with those of the 83 in situ carcinomas from the PICBIM series, and we observed no difference in nuclear grade, tumour size and hormonal status between the two groups of tumours. However, owing to the low number of in situ carcinomas observed in this series, it was not possible at this stage to draw any conclusions about the characteristics of the in situ tumours developed by HetAT participants.

Genome-wide copy number and LOH profiles of ATM breast tumours

High-quality SNP array data were obtained for 23 FFPE breast tumours; 2 tumours were from A-T subjects, and 21 tumours were from HetAT subjects. Tumour ploidy inferred from the absolute segmental copy number profiles and genotype status by the GAP method [26] identified 16 of 23 (70%) near-tetraploid tumours and 7 of 23 (30%) near-diploid tumours. CNVs and regions of LOH were subsequently determined by taking into account the ploidy of each tumour. No evidence of the homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) signature as measured by large-scale state transition genomic signature [18, 35] was observed among the ATM-associated tumours (Fig. 2a).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Copy number variation profiles of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-associated tumours analysed with the OncoScan array. a Genome-wide view of cumulative copy number variations present in the 23 ATM-associated tumours. Gains are indicated in red, losses in blue, and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in orange. b Cluster dendrogram and genomic regions altered in ≥ 70% of the 23 analysed tumours. Tumours from Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) children are indicated by asterisks. c Cluster dendrogram and genomic regions altered in ≥ 70% of the 16 tumours with confirmed biallelic inactivation of ATM. Tumours from A-T children are indicated by asterisks. Loss The two alleles are present in the tumour, Loss/LOH Only one allele is present in the tumour, Loss/LOH or Loss Consecutive segmental regions characterised as either ‘Loss/LOH’ or ‘Loss’, HBOC Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, HER2 Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2

Because ‘two-hit’ inactivation of the causative gene is regarded as a principal feature of molecular pathogenesis of most hereditary tumours, we next examined the LOH status of ATM-associated tumours at 11q22–23 in the tumours from HetAT participants. LOH was found in 14 of the 21 tumours (67%) developed by HetAT participants. Microsatellite analysis performed on a subset of 14 tumours confirmed the OncoScan results, except for 1 tumour (T0005). The one exception may be due to differences in sensitivity of the two methods. In the subsequent analyses, OncoScan results were not considered for this tumour. Sanger sequencing of the tumour-blood DNA pairs suggested that the ATM wild-type allele was lost in all tumours that underwent LOH at this locus (data not shown).

Genome-wide profiling of the 23 ATM-associated tumours revealed multiple copy number aberrations, including those previously reported in breast tumours, such as losses at 8p and gains at 8q [31], occurring in 50% and 70% of ATM-associated tumours, respectively (Fig. 2a and b). Copy number losses at 16q, 17p and 22q, which are known features of breast tumours of the luminal A and B subtypes [31, 36], were also seen in 70% of ATM-associated tumours (Fig. 2b). In addition, 70% of ATM-associated tumours showed copy number losses at 13q14.11-q14.3, 17p13.2-p12 and 21p11.2-p11.1 (Fig. 2b). The 13q14.11-q14.3 locus is 9.6 Mbp long and contains 90 genes, including LCP1 (lymphocyte cytosolic protein 1) and RB1 (RB transcriptional co-repressor 1) (Table 3). This region is included in the 13q12.3-q21 locus identified in high-grade luminal BRCA2-associated tumours as described by Pecuchet et al. [37]. The 17p13.2-p12 locus contains 166 cancer-related genes, including TP53 and MAP2K4 (Table 3). The 21p11.2-p11.1 locus is 1.2 Mbp long and contains only the PTEN-related tyrosine phosphatase gene TPTE, the pseudogene TEKT4P2 and four microRNAs (MIR3648-1, MIR3648-2, MIR3687-1 and MIR3687-2) (Fig. 2b and Table 3). A complete list of genes located in segment losses observed in ≥ 70% of ATM-associated breast tumours is provided in Additional file 1: Table S1.

Table 3 Copy number losses recurrently observed in the 23 ATM-associated breast tumours

When we restricted the analysis to the 16 tumours in which biallelic inactivation of ATM was demonstrated (i.e., breast tumours from A-T participants and breast tumours from HetAT participants showing LOH at the ATM locus), we found that copy number losses at 8p, 11q, 13q and 22q corresponded to longer chromosome segments than the ones described in the 23 ATM-associated tumours. The segment loss at 21p11 was the same as the one initially described (Fig. 2c and Table 3).

We also performed unsupervised hierarchical clustering analyses of CNV data. This analysis did not allow separation of ATM-associated tumours according to molecular subtype, LOH status at 11q22 (ATM locus), type of inherited variant (TV vs. MS) or origin of HetAT participants (A-T families or HBOC families) (Fig. 2b). Interestingly, the synchronous bilateral tumours from HetAT patient T0077 showed similar CNV profiles, whereas tumours from the two A-T participants showed quite distinctive features (Fig. 2b and c).

Finally, although the hierarchical clustering of the CNV data did not separate the tumours according to the variant type (TV vs. MS), we performed a sensitivity analysis excluding tumours of the four HetAT participants carrying an MS. This analysis confirmed that loci 8p21, 13q14, 16q13-q24, 17p13-p12 and 21p11 were sites of recurrent alterations found in ≥ 70% of ATM-associated tumours (Additional file 2: Figure S1). However, after exclusion of these 4 tumours, the boundaries of altered loci were extended, and locus 22q11 was lost in only 12 of the 19 analysed tumours.

Comparison with publicly available data

We used the publicly available data from TCGA [31] accessible through cBioportal [38] to investigate whether the genes listed in Table 3 were specifically lost in ATM-associated tumours. A total of 745 TCGA tumour samples with available CNV data were used. Those tumours were from individuals who developed invasive primary breast tumours and did not carry a deleterious variant in ATM, BRCA1 or BRCA2. In addition to LOH at the ATM locus, which was observed more frequently in ATM-associated tumours (67%) than in the TCGA ‘sporadic’ tumours (40.1%) (P = 0.02), several genes at other loci appeared more frequently lost in ATM-associated tumours, including TPTE (21p11.2-p11.1), GSTT1, GSTTP1 and GSTTP2 (22q11.23), as well as LCP1, RB1 (13q14), YWHAE, USP6, RABEP1 and MAP2K4 (17p13.3-p12) (Additional file 3: Table S2).

Deep whole-genome sequencing of ATM-associated tumours

Whole-genome massively parallel sequencing of four ATM-associated breast tumours (T0001-L, T0015-L, T0077-L and T0077-R) and their respective germline DNA was used to characterise the genetic landscape of ATM-associated tumours at base pair resolution. Tumour DNA was sequenced at a mean depth of coverage of 97× (range 82×–104×), and paired blood DNA was sequenced at a mean depth of coverage of 36× (range 35×–37×). CNV patterns obtained from WGS data for frozen tumours T0015-L, T0077-L and T0077-R were compared with CNV patterns obtained in the OncoScan analysis in the corresponding FFPE tumours. Loss/LOH was confirmed by whole-genome analysis for loci 8p21.3, 11q21-q24.2 (containing ATM), 13q13.3-q32.3, 16q22.1 and 17p13.3, whereas discordant results were obtained at locus 21p11.2-p11.1 for one tumour and at locus 22p11.23 for two tumours (Fig. 3a). Divergent ploidy estimations between the WGS analysis (ploidy 3.5) and the OncoScan analysis (ploidy 4) or the use of different tumour sections to prepare tumour DNA may explain these discrepancies. No OncoScan data were available for tumour T0001, but the CNV profile obtained from the WGS data showed LOH at 11q21-q24.2 (containing ATM) and also loss/LOH at 13q13.3-q32.3, 17p13.3 and 22q12.3-q13.31.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Copy number variation and single-nucleotide variant (SNV) profiles of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-associated tumours obtained by deep whole-genome sequencing (WGS). a Cumulative profiles of copy number gains, losses and of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) regions obtained from WGS of four ATM-associated tumours. Black boxes indicate the genomic regions identified in the OncoScan analysis; green boxes indicate the new genomic regions identified by WGS. b Venn diagram representing the number of somatic SNVs and indels shared between the four tumours. c Venn diagram representing the number of genes altered and shared between the four tumours

In addition we found that the four tumour genomes shared a region of copy number loss/LOH at 6q23.3-q27, which contains ESR1 encoding the ER, as well as a region of copy number loss at 19p13.3-p13.2 measuring 7.9 Mbp (Fig. 3a) and containing 256 genes (Table 3). Going back to the OncoScan data, we found that these two latter regions were indeed altered but in < 40% of the analysed FFPE tumour genomes.

On the basis of our analysis of high-confidence SNVs identified in each ATM-associated tumour genome, we next looked for potential driver mutations. Post-filtering, 51,161 SNVs were identified, 1004 of which were shared by 2 tumours and 29 of which were shared by 3 tumours (Fig. 3b). Only 794 SNVs were shared by the synchronous bilateral tumours T0077-L and T0077-R (Fig. 3b). When analyses were restricted to the coding part of the genome (exome), no genes were found to be altered either in all four tumours or in the two tumours from patient T0077 (Fig. 3c). Six genes were found to be altered in two tumours: MYO1A, DNAH11, SH2D5, ATM, MUC4 and ROS1 (Fig. 3c). However, only DNAH11 variants (c.7134+1G>A and c.9255_9257del) and the nonsense variant in MUC4 (c.11207C>G) are likely to have a deleterious impact on the gene product function and therefore might represent candidate driver mutations. The two ATM somatic variants identified in tumours T0015 and T0077-L were predicted as benign variants according to the Align-GVGD prediction tool (Fig. 3c).

Discussion

This exploratory study in which we investigated both the histological and molecular features of breast tumours developed by subjects who inherited one or two mutated copies of ATM describes, to our knowledge, the largest series of ATM-associated tumours reported to date. One asset of the study design is that the vast majority of participants included in the study carried a loss-of-function or missense variant that had been identified in an A-T family, hence avoiding introduction of noise into the analysis that would be due to misclassification of an ATM variant based on the impact on the protein function. Moreover, all ATM-associated breast tumours and the control series were blindly reviewed by trained reference pathologists of Institut Curie (AVS and GB), thus ensuring unbiased scoring of the morphological features.

The study revealed that most ATM-associated breast tumours are luminal B or luminal B/HER2+ tumours, which is consistent with a recent case-control study showing that ATM TV carriers are at increased risk of developing ER+ breast tumours [39]. Moreover, tetraploidy, loss of the wild-type allele at the ATM locus, and copy number loss/LOH at loci 13q14.11-q14.3, 17p13.2-p12, 21p11.2-p11.1 and 22q11.23 are hallmarks of breast tumours developed by ATM variant carriers.

In comparison with breast tumours associated with other BC susceptibility genes, we thus confirm previous observations showing that ATM-associated tumours do not resemble BRCA1-associated tumours [13, 15] or PALB2-associated tumours, which are also predominantly triple-negative tumours [40, 41]. Like BRCA2- and CHEK2-associated tumours, ATM-associated tumours are mostly luminal tumours [42,43,44] but they do not show a particular histological subtype as observed in BRCA1- (medullary) [45], BRCA2- (lobular) [45], CDH1- (lobular) [46], and PTEN-associated tumours (apocrine) [47].

The absence of histological resemblance between BRCA1- and ATM-associated tumours was reflected at the molecular level. Indeed, ATM-associated tumours do not show the HRD signature characterised by large-scale state transitions [18, 48], suggesting that tumorigenesis in BRCA1 variant carriers and ATM variant carriers occurs by different mechanisms. ATM-associated tumours also differ from luminal BRCA2-associated tumours, which can also display the HRD signature [35]. Our results are consistent with recently published results on tumour-derived genome sequences from seven BCs from TCGA carrying an ATM TV [49]. However, the absence of HRD in ATM-associated tumours does not exclude the possibility that HetAT subjects who develop BC may be sensitive to cisplatin and/or poly(ADP)-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors, as reported by others for HetAT subjects who developed prostate cancer [50]. Furthermore, it was shown that olaparib induces significant killing of ATM-deficient lymphoid tumour cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia [51].

Interestingly, tumour genomic profiling revealed that ~ 70% of ATM-associated breast tumours are tetraploid. Polyploidy can be triggered by cell fusion, endoreplication or abortive cell cycle [52]. ATM is required for three cell cycle checkpoints- G1/S border, S phase and G2/M- after DNA double-strand breaks, so the emergence of polyploidy could be due to cell cycle checkpoint defects linked to inactivation of ATM in breast tumours. Of note, tetraploidy was also reported in BRCA2-associated tumours associated with the luminal molecular subtype and loss of the normal allele [53], although this result was not confirmed when BRCA2 CNV profiles were investigated with SNP array and GAP methods [37].

We found that LOH at the ATM locus was more frequent in tumours from HetAT subjects (67%) than in ‘sporadic’ tumours from TCGA (40%) and from previous studies investigating LOH in tumours from sporadic BC cases (20–40%) [54, 55]. This observation is consistent with Knudson’s ‘two-hit’ model in which the second allele of the tumour suppressor gene would be an early event in the oncogenic process of hereditary BC. Similar results were found in BRCA1- and BRCA2-associated tumours [48]. With regard to ATM-associated tumours, one cannot exclude the possibility that biallelic inactivation of ATM occurs through promoter methylation of the gene in the seven tumours not showing LOH at the ATM locus or through point or small-size sequence variation (Fig. 1c). Another possible explanation for carriers of a deleterious missense variant would be that such alterations might have a dominant negative effect and therefore do not require inactivation of the second allele to impact gene product function. Finally, as previously reported, we did not observe a clear pattern of the biallelic inactivation of ATM according to variant type (TVs vs. deleterious or likely deleterious MS) [13].

In ATM-associated tumours, the cumulative profile of copy number losses, gains and regions in LOH revealed several genomic regions frequently altered in breast tumours, and in particular in luminal tumours, which was consistent with the molecular subtypes defined by IHC staining in our ATM series. Nevertheless, when comparing to TCGA sporadic tumours, the following copy number losses or regions of LOH appeared to be specific to ATM-associated tumours: 13q14.11-q14.3 (LHFP, FOXO1, LCP1, RB1), 21p11.2-p11.1 (TPTE, TEKT4P2, MIR3648-1, MIR3648-2, MIR3687-1, MIR3687-2) and 22q11.23 (GSTT1, GSTTP1, GSTTP2). Interestingly, loss of RB1 has been associated with a poor response to hormone therapy [56], and expression of LCP1 has been proposed as a biomarker of advanced tumour stage and tumour severity [57]. Unfortunately, in our study protein expression analysis could not be performed to validate the diminution of expression of these genes in ATM-associated tumours, owing to limited material.

To extend the repertoire of somatic alterations in ATM-associated tumours, we performed WGS on the four frozen tumours available. Only four deleterious variants located in the two genes DNAH11 and MUC4 were identified in two tumours. Little is known about the role of these two genes in tumourigenesis. However, the diminution of MUC4 expression has been associated with tumour progression and with an increase infiltration of immune CD8+ T and natural killer cells [58]. Remarkably, no mutation in TP53 and PIK3CA was detected in any of the four tumours, although these two genes are frequently mutated in luminal B tumours [59]. Despite the very limited sample size, we found that at the somatic level, ATM-associated tumours were more homogeneous in terms of CNV than in terms of SNV. In particular the two primary tumours from patient T0077 shared only 2.1% of SNVs. Moreover, no specific mutation signature as defined by Alexandrov et al. [60] could be identified using the SNV patterns of these four tumours only, and a larger tumour series should be sequenced to determine whether such signatures can discriminate ATM-associated tumours.

Conclusions

Altogether, ATM-associated tumours do not show the hormone receptor deficiency profile, and it is not clear whether breast tumours developed by HetAT patients could be targeted by alkylating agents or PARP inhibitors [50, 51]. Nonetheless, hallmarks of ATM-associated tumours were found and could help to identify ATM variant carriers outside an A-T context or an HBOC family context. More studies are needed to investigate whether genes located at loci 13q, 21p and 22q could harbour potential new therapeutic targets and whether RB1 deficiency could be a predictive biomarker for hormone therapy response for patients with BC carrying one or two mutated copies of ATM.