| Literature DB >> 23251452 |
Hongxiu Wen1, Yongjin Li, Sami N Malek, Yeong C Kim, Jia Xu, Peixian Chen, Fengxia Xiao, Xin Huang, Xianzheng Zhou, Zhenyu Xuan, Shiva Mankala, Guihua Hou, Janet D Rowley, Michael Q Zhang, San Ming Wang.
Abstract
Genetic aberrations contribute to acute myeloid leukemia (AML). However, half of AML cases do not contain the well-known aberrations detectable mostly by cytogenetic analysis, and these cases are classified as normal karyotype AML. Different outcomes of normal karyotype AML suggest that this subgroup of AML could be genetically heterogeneous. But lack of genetic markers makes it difficult to further study this subgroup of AML. Using paired-end RNAseq method, we performed a transcriptome analysis in 45 AML cases including 29 normal karyotype AML, 8 abnormal karyotype AML and 8 AML without karyotype informaiton. Our study identified 134 fusion transcripts, all of which were formed between the partner genes adjacent in the same chromosome and distributed at different frequencies in the AML cases. Seven fusions are exclusively present in normal karyotype AML, and the rest fusions are shared between the normal karyotype AML and abnormal karyotype AML. CIITA, a master regulator of MHC class II gene expression and truncated in B-cell lymphoma and Hodgkin disease, is found to fuse with DEXI in 48% of normal karyotype AML cases. The fusion transcripts formed between adjacent genes highlight the possibility that certain such fusions could be involved in oncological process in AML, and provide a new source to identify genetic markers for normal karyotype AML.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23251452 PMCID: PMC3520980 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1AML sample list and RNAseq data collection.
A. A total of 45 AML samples were used for the analysis, including 29 normal karyotype AML, 8 abnormal karyotype AML and 8 AML without karyotype information. B. RNAseq data collected from the 45 AML cases.
Figure 2Fusion transcript information.
A. Fusion transcripts identified in different types of AML. B. Validated fusion transcripts identified in normal karyotype AML.
Figure 3NFATC3-PLA2G15 fusion.
The fusion is formed between upstream gene NFATC3 and downstream gene PLA2G15 in 3′-5′ tail to head orientation. In this fusion, amino acid V (GTC) is shared at the fusion point (G from NFATC3 and TC from PLA2G15). A. Wild-type NFATC3 protein sequence; B. Wild-type PLA2G15 protein sequence; C. NFATC3-PLA2G15 fusion protein sequences. The bold V residue marks the fusion junction.
Figure 4Validation of sense and antisense fusion transcripts by strand-specific RT-PCR.
A. Summary for RNA samples from 8 myeloid cell lines. B. CIITA-DEXI sense and antisense fusion transcripts detected in myeloid cell lines and AML samples. +: positive control with beta-actin; -: netative control without RNA templates.
Figure 5Long-range PCR results.
A. Summary of the results from 11 fusion candidates. B. Size distribution of the amplified genomic DNA fragments.
Figure 6CIITA-DEXI fusion.
A. CIITA-involved protein-protein interaction network. B. Mapping and validation of CIITA-DEXI fusion. Three CIITA-DEXI fusions were detected. In the fusion, CIITA preserved the coding exone till the stop codon but losed its 3′ untranslated region. This fusion was detected by 23 paired-end RNAseq sequences and validated by Sanger sequencing.