| Literature DB >> 23877199 |
Ioannis Panagopoulos1, Ludmila Gorunova, Petter Brandal, Margaret Garnes, Anne Tierens, Sverre Heim.
Abstract
The rare but recurrent RUNX1-USP42 fusion gene is the result of a t(7;21)(p22;q22) chromosomal translocation and has been described in 6 cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and one case of refractory anemia with excess of blast. In the present study, we present the molecular genetic analysis and the clinical features of a t(7;21)(p22;q22)-positive AML case. PCR amplified two RUNX1-USP42 cDNA fragments but no reciprocal USP42-RUNX1 fragment indicating that the RUNX1-USP42 is the leukemogenic fusion gene. Sequencing of the two amplified fragments showed that exon 6 or exon 7 of RUNX1 (accession number NM_001754 version 3) was fused to exon 3 of USP42 (accession number NM_032172 version 2). The predicted RUNX1-USP42 fusion protein would contain the Runt homology domain (RHD), which is responsible for heterodimerization with CBFB and for DNA binding, and the catalytic UCH (ubiquitin carboxyl terminal hydroxylase) domain of the USP42 protein. The bone marrow cells in the present case also had a 5q deletion, and it was revealed that 5 out of the 8 reported cases (including the present case) with t(7;21)(p22;q22)/RUNX1-USP42 also had cytogenetic abnormalities of 5q. The fact that t(7;21) and 5q- occur together much more often than chance would allow seems to be unquestionable, although the pathogenetic connection between the two aberrations remains unknown.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23877199 PMCID: PMC3810351 DOI: 10.3892/or.2013.2623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Rep ISSN: 1021-335X Impact factor: 3.906
Figure 1Bone marrow smear of the patient taken at diagnosis. A monomorphous image of blasts which are small and with a scarse cytoplasm is evident. Giemsa staining at magnification ×400.
Figure 2Cytogenetic, FISH and PCR analyses. (A) Interphase FISH with del(5q) probe. The EGR1 probe (in 5q31) is labeled in red and the control probe mapped in 5p15.31 is labeled in green. Three nuclei had one red signal suggesting a hemizygous deletion of the EGR1 gene. All four nuclei had two green signals of the control probe. (B) Interphase FISH with the AML1/ETO probe. The AML1 probe (RUNX1) is labeled in red and the ETO probe (RUNX1T1) is labeled in green. Both nuclei had two green signals which suggest that the RUNX1T1 gene was not rearranged. Both nuclei had three red signals which suggest than one RUNX1 locus was rearranged. (C) Partial karyotype showing chromosome aberrations del(5q), der(7)t(7;21)(p22;q22), and der(21)t(7;21)(p22;q22) together with the corresponding normal homologues; breakpoint positions are indicated by arrows. (D) FISH on metaphase spread using the AML1/ETO probe. Green signals (ETO probe) are observed only on chromosomes 8 (normal RUNX1T1). Part of the AML1 probe (RUNX1) is located on 7p22. (E) cDNA fragment amplification of RUNX1-USP42 (lane 1) using the primers RUNX1–765F and USP42–562R. PCR with primers USP42–116F and RUNX1–1489R did not amplify any cDNA fragment (lane 2). M, 1 kb DNA ladder. (F) Partial sequence chromatograms of the two amplified RUNX1-USP42 fragments showing that exon 6 of RUNX1 is fused to exon 3 of USP42 and that exon 7 of RUNX1 is fused to exon 3 of USP42.
Figure 3Diagram showing the four known variants of the RUNX1-USP42 chimeric transcripts and the predicted RUNX1-USP42 protein of 1504 amino acids which corresponds to the type 1 chimeric transcript. The protein retains the RUNT domain of RUNX1 (position 77–205) and the ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolases family 2 domain (UCH_2_3; position 299–601).