Literature DB >> 15085154

Hox expression in AML identifies a distinct subset of patients with intermediate cytogenetics.

J Roche1, C Zeng, A Barón, S Gadgil, R M Gemmill, I Tigaud, X Thomas, H A Drabkin.   

Abstract

We previously reported that favorable and poor prognostic chromosomal rearrangements in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were associated with distinct levels of HOX expression. We have now analyzed HOX expression in 50 independent adult AML patients (median age=62 years), together with FLT3 and FLT3-ligand mRNA levels, and FLT3 mutation determination. By cluster analysis, we could divide AMLs into cases with low, intermediate and high HOX expression. Cases with high expression were uniquely restricted to a subset of AMLs with intermediate cytogenetics (P=0.0174). This subset has significantly higher levels of FLT3 expression and appears to have an increase of FLT3 mutations (44%), while CEBPalpha mutations were infrequent (6%). FLT3 mRNA levels were correlated with the expression of multiple HOX genes, whereas FLT3 mutations were correlated with HOXB3. In some cases, FLT3 was expressed at levels equivalent to GAPDH in the absence of genomic amplification. We propose that high HOX expression may be characteristically associated with a distinct biologic subset of AML. The apparent global upregulation of HOX expression could be due to growth-factor signaling or, alternatively, these patterns may reflect a particular stage of differentiation of the leukemic cells.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15085154     DOI: 10.1038/sj.leu.2403366

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Leukemia        ISSN: 0887-6924            Impact factor:   11.528


  25 in total

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3.  Low HOX gene expression in PML-RARα-positive leukemia results from suppressed histone demethylation.

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4.  Up-regulation of homeodomain genes, DLX1 and DLX2, by FLT3 signaling.

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5.  HOX deregulation in acute myeloid leukemia.

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Review 6.  The role of Hox proteins in leukemogenesis: insights into key regulatory events in hematopoiesis.

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7.  HOX expression patterns identify a common signature for favorable AML.

Authors:  M Andreeff; V Ruvolo; S Gadgil; C Zeng; K Coombes; W Chen; S Kornblau; A E Barón; H A Drabkin
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2008-07-31       Impact factor: 11.528

8.  Integrative meta-analysis of differential gene expression in acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Brady G Miller; John A Stamatoyannopoulos
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-03-01       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Gene expression profiling and candidate gene resequencing identifies pathways and mutations important for malignant transformation caused by leukemogenic fusion genes.

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10.  The TRC8 ubiquitin ligase is sterol regulated and interacts with lipid and protein biosynthetic pathways.

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