The consequences of uniparental disomy and copy number neutral loss-of-heterozygosity during human development and cancer

2011 ◽  
Vol 103 (7) ◽  
pp. 303-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Lapunzina ◽  
David Monk
Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 1098-1098
Author(s):  
Samantha JL Knight ◽  
Elham Sadighi Akha ◽  
Adele Timbs ◽  
Tariq Enver ◽  
Andrew R Pettitt ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1098 Poster Board I-120 Background B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) is the most common form of adult leukaemia in the Western World. It is a heterogeneous disease and important biological and clinical differences have been identified. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying emergence and maintenance of B-CLL after treatment remain elusive. Array based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) has revolutionized our ability to perform genome wide analyses of copy number variation (CNV) within cancer genomes. Single Nucleotide Polymorphism arrays (aSNP) provide genotyping and copy number variation data and detect regions of copy neutral Loss of Heterozygosity (cnLOH) with the potential to indicate genes involved in leukaemia pathogenesis. Both technologies are evolving rapidly and emerging platforms are thought to allow high resolution (HR) of abnormalities down to a single gene level. Aim The aim of the current study was therefore to test a HR-aCGH and a HR-aSNP platform for their ability to detect large and small CNVs and regions of cnLOH in B-CLL. More specifically, we wanted to: Method We used a high resolution 244K aCGH platform and a 1Mio SNP array in parallel to test and characterize enriched B-CLL peripheral blood samples (>80% CD19+;CD5+) from 44 clinically annotated patients collected at our institution. To distinguish CNVs seen commonly in the general population the results were compared with ‘in house’ control data sets and the Database of Genomic Variants (http://projects.tcag.ca/variation/). Results Our results show that large abnormalities, already noted by FISH, were reliably identified and the boundaries of abnormalities at 11q22.3, 13q14.2 and 17p could be defined more precisely. In addition, novel and recurrent CNVs within the sample set were identified (1p33; 3p24.3; 3p14.2; 4q12; 4q13.3; 6q21; 6q27; 8p22; 10q24; 11p15.4; 11q12; 11q13.4; 11q14.1; 11q22.1; 11q23.3; 13q14.11; 14q21.1; 15q15.1; 15q25.3; 17p13.3; 17q22; 18p11.32; 18p23; 19p13.13; 19p13.12; 19p13.32; 22q11.21; 22q11.22). Interestingly, some of these abnormalities contain single gene alterations involving oncogenes, chemokine receptors, kinases and transcription factors important in B cell development and differentiation. Assessment of smaller CNVs (less then 10 consecutive oligonucleotides) also revealed recurrent CNVs involving single genes that were clustered according to function and pathways. Comparison of paired pre-treatment and relapse samples showed differences in large CNVs in 6 out of the 14 pairs with the majority being losses within the relapse sample. In particular, relapse samples contained new losses within 2q33.1-2q37.1; 4q13.2-4q13.3; 5q31.3-5q34; 7q36.3; 10q23.1-10q25.1 11q12.3 and multiple losses within 13q14.1-13q14.3. Taken together, these data indicates that genomic instability plays a role in clonal evolution and selection after treatment in at least some patients. Analysis of a bigger cohort of matched pre-treatment and relapse samples is on-going. The importance of copy neutral LOH in B-CLL has been a subject of debate. Using the 1Mio HR-aSNP, we were able to detect multiple regions of cnLOH throughout the genome. Examination of the four regions that are known to have prognostic significance when deleted identified cnLOH involving 13q11-13q34(ter) and cnLOH of 13q21.1-q34(ter) outside the FISH region. Deletions of the 17p13.1 locus including the p53 gene confer poor prognosis in B-CLL and direct treatment decisions. Interestingly, we were able to identify cnLOH involving this region in 5% of samples. In addition, we also noticed cnLOH in 17p13.2 containing genes previously implicated in cancer. The exact pathogenetic and prognostic implications of these findings remain to be established. Conclusion Using HR-aCGH and HR-aSNP we have identified novel recurrent CNVs and regions of cnLOH in patients with B-CLL. Sequential analysis of the same patients over time suggests that at least in some patients, clonal complexity and dynamics are driven by genomic instability. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4806-4806
Author(s):  
Peter Papenhausen ◽  
Stuart Schwartz ◽  
Henry Y. Dong ◽  
Alan F. List ◽  
Ronald Thomason

Abstract Abstract 4806 A series of 206 bone marrow aspirates/blood submitted for diagnostic testing for possible MDS/MPN was studied by high resolution SNP microarray to determine the efficacy of this technology for detecting clonal copy number alterations and copy neutral loss of heterozygosity. The latter, acquired uniparental disomy (aUPD), is associated with oncogene mutations that through mitotic recombination have converted to the homozygous state, offering additional selective advantage to daughter cells. Of the 206 patient samples classified as possible MDS, 76 were abnormal by the array. Thirty one of these were either copy neutral or demonstrated copy number alterations below the resolution of cytogenetics. Twenty-three cases demonstrated aUPD and in 14 of these it was the only abnormality detected. Two of these 14 had multiple aUPD (9q/14q and 1p/4q/14q). When the aUPD clones were accompanied by copy number alterations, they could be seen as either the early primary alteration or as a later evolutionary event. The most common segmental UPD regions in MDS were 4q(9), 7q(4),11q(4) and 14q(4) while 9p(4) was the most common a(UPD in the patients with MPN which was likely to be associated with a homozygous JAK2 mutation (confirmed in two cases). The small MPN group (12 cases) demonstrated eight clones with aUPD, only three of which had copy number alterations. All the aUPDs found in this study involved terminal chromosome arm exchange and almost all involved a percentage of the DNA tested, consistent with an acquired change. Whole chromosome aUPD was not seen in these patients. There were three instances of possible interstitial LOH which were not included in this report until normal patient DNA can be obtained to confirm this uncommon observation. Two of these three showed mosaic LOH consistent with an acquired change. The most common deletions below the resolution of cytogenetics involved the RUNX1 and TET2 genes. In summary, the SNP microarray increased the abnormal clone detection from 45 by cytogenetics to 76 in cases of MDS and from 4 to 8 in the small MPN cohort, underscoring the utility of the testing while laying the groundwork for the discovery of new driver genes in the aUPD regions in the pathogenesis of MDS. Disclosures: Papenhausen: LabCorp: Employment. Schwartz:LabCorp: Employment. Thomason:LabCorp: Employment.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4567-4567
Author(s):  
Megan Hanna ◽  
Bethany Tesar ◽  
Kristen E. Stevenson ◽  
Alexander R. Vartanov ◽  
Stacey M. Fernandes ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4567 Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common leukemia of adults, and prognosis is still difficult to predict, although cytogenetic abnormalities identified by FISH are most helpful. Isolated reports have suggested that copy neutral loss of heterozygosity (cnLOH) can involve 13q and 17p in CLL, but the extent and the impact on clinical outcome is not well established. We therefore embarked upon characterization of cnLOH in a large set of 230 CLLs with matched normal DNA. The median age at diagnosis of CLL in this patient population was 54 (33–79). 87% of patients were Rai 0–1 at diagnosis, and 79% were chemotherapy naive at sampling. 121 of 230 patients were treated, with a median TTFT of 42 months. The median follow-up for surviving patients is 74 months. 44% of patients carried one somatic copy number abnormality (CNA) by SNP array, 20% two, 7% three, 5% four and 4% more than five. cnLOH was called by the Affymetrix Genotyping Console Software, which evaluates each SNP for copy number and then subtracts the A allele value from the B allele value within an individual sample, thereby allowing independent evaluation of tumor (somatic) and normal (germline). All calls were manually reviewed. A size cut-off of 1.0 Mb was used to determine significant cnLOH events. In total, of 230 patients, we found 26 events of somatic cnLOH (11%) and 36 events of germline cnLOH (16%), affecting 56 separate patients (24%). This frequency of cnLOH was surprisingly high and suggested that cnLOH might be an alternative mechanism affecting known loci in CLL. This was the case, as the most common events overall involved 13q in 25 patients, the X chromosome in 9 patients, chromosomes 17 and 18 in five patients each, and chromosomes 9, 11 and 12 in four patients each. Interestingly, germline events were quite common. Six patients had small regions of germline LOH with much more extensive adjacent somatic LOH, two on chr 13, one on chr 17, two on chr X and one on chr 20; these were coded as germline in the analysis. In addition, of the 25 patients with cnLOH on chromosome 13, 18 of these were in the germline and 7 were somatic. The region(s) of cnLOH were typically adjacent to a 13q deletion, and often involved the entire chromosome arm. Somatic cnLOH at 13q was associated with intermediate sized deletions including the RB gene (p=0.002). Of the 18 patients with germline cnLOH at 13q, 7 of them had no 13q deletion, while 7 had monoallelic deletion and 4 biallelic deletion. Thus 7 patients (3%) had cnLOH events at 13q, in the absence of 13q deletion, again suggesting an alternative mechanism affecting this locus. Germline cnLOH was associated with treatment prior to sampling (44% vs 17%, p<0.001), possibly due to its association with unmutated IGHV(58% vs 32%, p=0.008), and ZAP70 positivity (59% vs 36%, p=0.024). Somatic cnLOH was not associated with any patient characteristics. Neither somatic nor germline cnLOH was associated with >= 1 somatic CNA, but an association between both LOH types and >= 2 somatic CNAs was observed (p=0.053 germline and p=0.030 somatic). TTFT was reduced in patients with either germline cnLOH (61 mos vs 103, p=0.004) or somatic cnLOH (53 mos vs 107, p=0.008). Presence of two or more CNAs was also associated with short TTFT (48 mos vs 115, p<0.001). In order to assess the impact of cnLOH and CNAs on outcome independent of prior therapy, we evaluated TTFT in the 181 chemotherapy naive patients. In this subgroup, germline cnLOH was not associated with short TTFT, while somatic cnLOH (80 mos vs 125, p=0.018) and two or more somatic CNAs (80 mos vs 125, p=0.009) were. In multivariable Cox modeling including germline cnLOH, IGHV, and del 11q or 17p by FISH, the only significant predictor of TTFT was unmutated IGHV (hazard ratio (HR) 4.48, p<0.001). In multivariable Cox modeling including somatic cnLOH and the variables above, the only significant predictor of TTFT was again unmutated IGHV (HR 4.41, p<0.001). When the presence of two or more somatic CNAs was added to these models, this variable was significant along with IGHV (HR 2.04, p=0.009 in germline model; HR 1.84, p=0.033 in somatic model). We conclude that both somatic and germline cnLOH are common in CLL, affecting one quarter of patients in this dataset, and frequently involve chromosomal regions known to be important in CLL. cnLOH is associated with increased somatic CNAs and unmutated IGHV, and therefore poor prognosis. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2012 ◽  
Vol 159 (4) ◽  
pp. 480-482 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shefali Parikh ◽  
Nieves Perdigones ◽  
Michelle Paessler ◽  
Barbara Greenbaum ◽  
Laura S. Tooke ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S105-S106
Author(s):  
Aparna Bhutkar ◽  
Anastasia Gurinovich ◽  
Thomas T Perls ◽  
Paola Sebastiani ◽  
Stefano Monti

Abstract Mosaicism, the presence of two or more genotypically or karyotypically distinct populations of cells in a single individual, plays an important role in human disease. Mosaicism can result in mutations and/or chromosomal alterations such as loss, gain, or copy-number neutral loss of heterozygosity. Clonal mosaicism and its relationship to aging and cancer, has been previously studied, and earlier work suggests that clonal mosaicism tends to increase with age. The aim of our research is to use genotype data of centenarians to explore the relationship between extreme longevity and mosaic chromosomal alterations (mCAs). To this end, we analyzed genome-wide genotypes from blood-derived DNA of 338 individuals from the New England Centenarian Study. The participants in this dataset ranged from 45 to 112 years of age. For the detection of mCA events, we used MoChA (https://github.com/freeseek/mocha), a bcftools extension, that predicts mCAs based on B-allele frequency (BAF) and log2 intensity(R) ratio (LRR), and uses long-range phase information to increase sensitivity. Chromosomal alteration events, including whole chromosome events, were detected in 180 out of the 338 individuals. A total of 165 duplications, 97 deletions, and 9 copy-number neutral loss of heterozygosity were detected. Additionally, there were 42 events whose copy number state could not be determined with high confidence. 236 events out of the 313 were detected in individuals aged 100 and older. Our analysis of chromosomal alteration frequency by age indicates that, within centenarians, the proportion of individuals with mCAs significantly decreases with increased age (p &lt; 0.05, correlation -0.73).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang-Li Dai ◽  
Ke Huang ◽  
Ming-Qiang Zhu ◽  
Mian-Ling Zhong ◽  
Guan-Ping Dong ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundPrader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder that is partially caused by maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) of chromosome 15. Copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity (CN-LOH) observed on the distal long arm of chromosome 15 may be an indicator of UPD and may require additional genetic testing as chromosome 15 is known to harbor imprinted genes.MethodsChromosome microarray (CMA) was performed for two children with developmental disabilities or congenital anomalies. The results showed CN-LOH on the distal long arm of chromosome 15. Thereafter, methylation-specific PCR (MS-PCR) or methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MS-MLPA) was performed to confirm the diagnosis of PWS.ResultsMS-PCR did not detect an unmethylated allele for the SNRPN gene or MS-MLPA hypermethylation in 15q11.2-q13.1 region, supporting the diagnosis of PWS.ConclusionsThese data suggested that LOH on chromosome 15, and even the critical region of 15q11.2q13.1 was not involved, perhaps due to partial heterodisomy and partial isodisomy UPD15. Hence, other genetic tests are warranted for the diagnosis of PWS.


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