| Literature DB >> 26066811 |
Marco Togni1, Riccardo Masetti2, Martina Pigazzi3, Annalisa Astolfi4, Daniele Zama1, Valentina Indio4, Salvatore Serravalle1, Elena Manara3, Valeria Bisio3, Carmelo Rizzari5, Giuseppe Basso3, Andrea Pession1, Franco Locatelli6.
Abstract
The genomic landscape of children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who do not carry any cytogenetic abnormality (CN-AML) is particularly heterogeneous and challenging, being characterized by different clinical outcomes. To provide new genetic insights into this AML subset, we analyzed through RNA-seq 13 pediatric CN-AML cases, corroborating our findings in an independent cohort of 168 AML patients enrolled in the AIEOP AML 2002/01 study. We identified a chimeric transcript involving NUP98 and PHF23, resulting from a cryptic t(11;17)(p15;p13) translocation, demonstrating, for the first time, that NUP98-PHF23 is a novel recurrent (2.6%) abnormality in pediatric CN-AML.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26066811 PMCID: PMC4467064 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-015-0167-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Identification of NUP98-PHF23 in pediatric CN-AML. a Schematic representation of NUP98-PHF23 fusion identified by RNA-seq in pediatric CN-AML. Fusion occurs between exon 13 of NUP98 and exon 4 of PHF23. b Electropherogram from Sanger sequencing of the region surrounding the breakpoint confirmed the in-frame fusion. A black arrow indicates the fusion breakpoint, predicted sequence of the fusion protein is shown. c FISH analysis was performed on metaphases and interphase cells using three BlueFISH probes (BlueGnome Ltd., Cambridge), according to the manufacturer’s instructions. BAC clones RP11-120E20 and RP11-348A20 (red) were used to probe the NUP98 gene on chromosome 11, while the BAC clone RP11-542C16 (green) was used to target the PHF23 gene on chromosome 17. Normal metaphases (upper left) and interphase nuclei (upper right) showed two red signals representing normal copies of NUP98 and two green signals representing normal copies of PHF23. Abnormal metaphases (lower left) and interphase cells (lower right) containing the NUP98-PHF23 fusion gene showed one red (NUP98), one green (PHF23) and one yellow fusion signal, which represents the juxtaposition of the translocated portions of the two genes
Clinical features of pediatric CN-AML patients harboring the NUP98-PHF23 fusion gene
| Id | Age, years | Gender | WBC, x 109/L | FAB | BM blast, % at diagnosis | Extramedullary involvement | HSCT (type) | CR after induction therapy | Relapse (site) | Disease-free duration (months) | Survival duration (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN-AML_54a | 2.9 | M | 187 | M1 | 90 | No | Yes (AUTO) | Yes | Yes (BM) | 5 | 30b |
| CN-AML_66a | 9.0 | M | 1.2 | M0 | 70 | No | Yes (MUD) | Yes | – | 65 | 66 |
| CN-AML_3 | 9.7 | M | 6.9 | M4 | 40 | No | Yes (MUD) | Yes | – | 40 | 41 |
| CN-AML_4 | 7.0 | M | 1.8 | M5A | 54 | No | Yes (AUTO) | Yes | – | 103 | 104 |
AUTO autologous, CR complete remission, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, MUD matched unrelated donor, BM bone marrow, WBC white blood cells
apatients identified by RNA-seq
bdead patient