BRAF alterations have been described in a wide spectrum of brain tumors, including in gliomas and glioneuronal tumors. BRAFV600E mutations have been found in approximately 10--15% of pilocytic astrocytoma and in approximately 5--10% of pediatric diffusely infiltrating gliomas, including diffuse astrocytomas (WHO grade II), anaplastic astrocytomas (WHO grade III) and glioblastomas (WHO grade IV), but in less than 2% of comparable adult gliomas. This mutation is potentially targetable.
Somatic mutations in TP53 are frequent in human cancer. Germline TP53 mutations cause of Li-Fraumeni syndrome, which is associated with a range of early-onset cancers. The types and positions of TP53 mutations are diverse. TP53 mutations may be potential prognostic and predictive markers in some tumor types, as well as targets for pharmacological intervention in some clinical settings. The IARC TP53 Database (http://www-p53.iarc.fr/) is a useful resource which catalogues TP53 mutations found in cancer.
This gene is a known cancer gene. ARID1A/BAF250A subunit of the SWI/SNF (BAF) chromatin remodeling complex has emerged as recurrently mutated in a broad array of tumor types and a potential tumor suppressor. There is evidence indicating that ARID1A-mutated cancers may be subjected to therapeutic intervention.