Faculty Opinions recommendation of Genome-wide analysis of genetic alterations in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

Author(s):  
Ross Cagan
Nature ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 446 (7137) ◽  
pp. 758-764 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles G. Mullighan ◽  
Salil Goorha ◽  
Ina Radtke ◽  
Christopher B. Miller ◽  
Elaine Coustan-Smith ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Christopher D. Coldren ◽  
Bifing Gao ◽  
Jessica L. Rice ◽  
Sonia Leach ◽  
Ivana V. Yang ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 420-420
Author(s):  
Kumi Nakazaki ◽  
Yasuhito Nannya ◽  
Masashi Sanada ◽  
Go Yamamoto ◽  
Chiaki Aoyama ◽  
...  

Abstract Non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) are hematopoietic malignancies originated from diversity of peripheral lymphoid organs. During the past two decades, there have been significant advances in the pathogenesis of NHL including identification of a number of genes associated with the disease-specific translocations and other genetic alterations. In view of cytogenetics, however, NHL frequently shows complex chromosomal abnormalities involving copy number alterations as well as other unbalanced translocations, many of which have not been unveiled at the molecular levels. Affymetrix® 100K/500K mapping arrays were originally developed for large-scale SNP typing required for genome-wide association studies, but the quantitative nature of the whole-genome amplification and hybridization used in these platforms also makes them powerful tools for genome-wide analysis of cancer genomes with use of uniformly distributed 116,204/520,000 SNP-specific probes. Moreover the use of SNP specific probes enables allele-specific copy number analysis that is totally impossible with other platforms. Here we developed the robust algorithms (Copy number analyzer for Affymetrix® GeneChip®; CNAG) for high-quality processing of 100K/500K data and analyzed a total of 72 NHL samples (61 primary samples including 34 diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 18 follicular lymphoma and 11 cell lines including 3 adult T cell leukemia/ lymphoma) for genome-wide copy number alterations, LOH, and allelic imbalances at the resolutions of 23.6/5.4 kb. In 100K analysis, 34 homozygous deletions and 42 high-grade amplifications and other numerous copy number alternations and/or LOH, were identified together with possible gene targets as for some regions. 500K analysis disclosed even more subtle changes. Common overlapping alternations included deletions in 1p31.1 and 9p21.3, and 19p13.32 and high-grade amplifications in 3p14.2–p14.1,7q21.13–q21.3, and 20q11.21. Of particular importance is, however, the finding of otherwise undetected copy number neutral LOHs, which are revealed only by allele-specific copy-number analysis. In fact the copy number neutral LOHs represented a novel type of genetic abnormality in NHL because they were very frequent and found in more than 87% (20/23) of NHL cases examined with allele-specific copy number analysis, making a stark contrast to ALL, in which these abnormalities were rare. They typically involved chromosomal ends, indicating somatic recombinations are the potential mechanism of generating these abnormalities. Notably, there was a clear predisposition of the copy number neutral LOH to specific chromosomal loci including 1p, 1q, 6p, 9p, 17q, and 19p suggesting existence of relevant genes to NHL pathogenesis within these common regions. In conclusion, Affymetrix® SNP-genotyping microarrays and our CNAG algorithms provide a powerful platform of dissecting NHL genomes and could facilitate identification of the novel molecular mechanisms for lymphomagenesis.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1089-1089 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles G Mullighan ◽  
Ina Radtke ◽  
Jinghui Zhang ◽  
Letha A. Phillips ◽  
Xiaoping Su ◽  
...  

Abstract Expression of BCR-ABL1 is the hallmark of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and a subset of de novo acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), but the factors determining disease lineage, and progression of CML to myeloid or lymphoid blast crisis, are incompletely understood. We recently reported deletion of IKZF1 (encoding the lymphoid transcription factor Ikaros) in 85% of de novo pediatric and adult BCR-ABL1 ALL, and in lymphoid blast crisis in a small cohort of CML cases (Nature2008;453:110), suggesting that IKZF1 deletion is important in the pathogenesis of BCR-ABL1 lymphoid leukemia. To identify genetic determinants of disease stage and blast crisis lineage in CML, we have now performed high-resolution, genome wide analysis of DNA copy number abnormalities (CNA) and loss-of heterozygosity (LOH) and candidate gene resequencing in a cohort of 90 CML patients that included 64 samples obtained at chronic phase (CP), 15 samples at accelerated phase (AP), 9 lymphoid blast crisis (LBC) and 22 myeloid blast crisis (MBC) samples. Importantly, 25 patients had sequential samples (CP and/or AP, as well as blast crisis samples) enabling analysis of lesions acquired at progression to blast crisis. All blast crisis samples were flow sorted to at least 90% purity prior to DNA extraction. Germline samples for 28 cases obtained at remission or by flow sorting of blast crisis samples were also examined. Affymetrix SNP 6.0 arrays, interrogating over 1.87 million genomic loci, were used for 85 samples, and 500K arrays for the remainder. Identification of tumor-specific (somatic) copy number analysis was performed by directly comparing CML samples to matched germline samples were available, or by filtering results against databases of inherited copy number variants for samples lacking germline material. Genomic resequencing of IKZF1, PAX5 and TP53 was performed for all AP, LBC and MBC samples. There were few CNAs in CP-CML (mean 0.27 deletions and 0.07 gains per case), with no recurring lesions identified apart from deletions or gains at the chromosomal breakpoints of BCR and ABL1 (3 cases each). Notably, the size of these translocation associated deletions was highly variable, ranging from 6kb (one ABL1 deletion) and 15 kb (one BCR deletion) to deletions extending to the telomeres of chromosomes 9 and 22. No significant increase in lesion frequency was identified in AP cases (0.14 deletions and 0.9 gains per case), however the number and cumulative extent of genomic aberrations was significantly higher in both lymphoid and myeloid blast crisis samples. LBC cases had a mean of 8.1 deletions/case (P<0.0001v CP) and 2.8 gains/case (P=0.0024), where as MBC had fewer alterations with only an average of 2.8 deletions/ case (P=0.028 v CP) and 2.2 gains/case (P=0.0018). Similarly, the cumulative extent of DNA altered by CNAs was higher in both LBC (200 Mb/case) and MBC (257 Mb/case) than CP-CML (4.1 Mb/case). There were striking differences in the type of CNAs in MBC and LBC samples. Seven of 9 LBC cases had focal CNAs targeting genes regulating normal B-lymphoid development, including IKZF1 (6 cases, 2 homozygous), PAX5 (4 cases), and EBF1 (1 case with focal homozygous deletion restricted to the EBF1 locus). Thus, of these 7 cases, two had a single CNA in this pathway, three had two lesions, and two cases had three lesions. In contrast, only 4 of 22 MBC cases had lesions in this pathway, most commonly from whole or sub chromosomal deletions involving chromosomes 7 and 9. Deletion of the CDKN2A/B locus (encoding the tumor suppressors and cell cycle regulators INK4A, ARF and INK4B) was seen in 6 (67%) LBC samples, but only 2 (9%) MBC cases, and never in CP or AP CML. Other lesions commonly seen in de novo BCR-ABL1 ALL were also observed in LBC samples, including deletions of MEF2C, C20orf94, and the HBS1L gene immediately upstream of the oncogene MYB. Apart from acquisition of new or more complex abnormalities involving BCR and ABL1, the only recurring mutation observed in MBC was deletion (4 cases) or splice-site point mutations (2 cases) of TP53. These data demonstrate a lack of genomic instability with few genetic alterations in CP or AP CML. Lymphoid blast crisis samples have similar genetic alterations to those seen in de novo BCR-ABL1 ALL, whereas myeloid blast crisis displays completely distinct patterns of mutation, most commonly targeting P53. These results indicate that genomic abnormalities are important determinants of lineage and disease progression in BCR-ABL1 leukemia.


2012 ◽  
Vol 160 (3) ◽  
pp. 406-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Sandoval ◽  
Holger Heyn ◽  
Jesús Méndez‐González ◽  
Antonio Gomez ◽  
Sebastian Moran ◽  
...  

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