| Literature DB >> 25591497 |
Hiroshi Sata1, Hirohiko Shibayama2, Ikuhiro Maeda3, Yoko Habuchi1, Eiji Nakatani4, Kentaro Fukushima1, Jiro Fujita1, Sachiko Ezoe1, Seiji Tadokoro1, Tetsuo Maeda1, Masao Mizuki1, Satoru Kosugi5, Masashi Nakagawa6, Shuji Ueda7, Masato Iida8, Yukihiro Tokumine9, Yasuhiko Azenishi10, Hideki Mitsui11, Kenji Oritani1, Yuzuru Kanakura1.
Abstract
Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with patient-specific, allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) primers for individual immunoglobulin H VDJ region (ASO-PCR) amplification was performed using several sources of clinical material, including mRNA from peripheral blood cells (PBMNCs), whole bone marrow cells (BMMNCs), and the CD20+ CD38- B-cell population in bone marrow, as well as cell-free DNA from the sera of patients with multiple myeloma (MM). We designed the ASO primers and produced sufficient PCR fragments to evaluate tumor burden in 20 of 30 bone marrow samples at diagnosis. Polymerase chain reaction amplification efficiency depended on primer sequences because the production of ASO-PCR fragments did not correlate with serum M-protein levels. However, the ASO-PCR levels in BMMNCs showed statistically significant correlations with those in PBMNCs and CD20+ CD38- B-cells. The good association between the BMMNC and PBMNC data indicated that PBMNCs could be a suitable source for monitoring minimal residual disease (MRD). In the case of cell-free DNA, ASO-PCR levels showed a unique pattern and remained high even after treatment. Because the sequence information for each ASO-PCR product was identical to the original, the cell-free DNA might also be useful for evaluating MRD. Moreover, the ASO-PCR products were clearly detected in 17 of 22 mRNA samples from CD20+ CD38- populations, suggesting that MM clones might exist in relatively earlier stages of B cells than in plasma cells. Thus, ASO-PCR analysis using various clinical materials is useful for detecting MRD in MM patients as well as for clarifying MM pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25591497 DOI: 10.1016/j.exphem.2015.01.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Hematol ISSN: 0301-472X Impact factor: 3.084