| Literature DB >> 26719766 |
Roman Alpatov1, Billie Carstens1, Kimberly Harding1, Carolyn Jarrett1, Sudabeh Balakhani1, Jessica Lincoln1, Peter Brzeskiewicz1, Yu Guo1, Alex Ohene-Mobley1, Jamie LeRoux1, Veronica McDaniel1, Lynne Meltesen1, Diane Minka1, Mahendra Patel2, Cyrus Manavi3, Karen Swisshelm1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) is a lymphoproliferative disease characterized by multiple recurring clonal cytogenetic anomalies and is the most common leukemia in adults. Chromosomal abnormalities associated with CLL include trisomy 12 and IGH;BCL3 rearrangement [t(14;19)(q32;q13)] that juxtaposes a proto-oncogenic gene BCL3 and an immunoglobulin heavy chain, a translocation that may be associated with shorter survival. In addition to the IGH;BCL3 rearrangement, other translocations involving 14q32 locus are involved in various lymphoproliferative pathologies pointing toward the significance of IGH locus in oncogenic progression. Significantly, in the majority of B-cell neoplasms that carry an IGH;BCL3 rearrangement, it is a sole translocation involving an IGH locus. CASEEntities:
Keywords: B-cell lymphoma/leukemia; Double IGH;BCL2 and IGH;BCL3 translocation; ERCC2 duplication
Year: 2015 PMID: 26719766 PMCID: PMC4696310 DOI: 10.1186/s13039-015-0203-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cytogenet ISSN: 1755-8166 Impact factor: 2.009
Fig. 1a H&E staining of the bone marrow showing marked interstitial involvement by medium sized cells with small but conspicuous nucleoli. b CD20 immunohistochemistry highlights marked involvement of the bone marrow by abnormal B-cells
Fig. 2a Karyotype of the first clone. The first clone (stemline [sl]), six cells, contained a translocation between the long (q) arms of chromosomes 14 and 19 (arrows), and gain of one copy of chromosome 12 (underlined). b BCL3 break-apart FISH probe (green/red) indicates rearrangement of a BCL3 locus in the first clone (arrows). Normal FISH signal is shown on the right side of the panel for comparison. c IGH break-apart FISH probe (green/red) indicates rearrangement of an IGH locus in the first clone (arrows). Normal FISH signal is shown on the right side of the panel for comparison
Fig. 3a Representative karyotype of the second clone. The second clone, a composite of two cells, was a doubling of the stemline clone (the first clone) with two copies of a translocation between 14q and 18q (IGH;BCL2, red arrows), in addition to a 14q and 19q translocation (IGH;BCL3, white arrows). Six copies of chromosome 12 are underlined. b FISH analysis of the second clone using dual fusion IGH;BCL2 probe (green/red). Black and white image for IGH signal shows 8 loci indicating that all IGH sequences are rearranged and present on derivative chromosomes 14, 18, and 19. Black and white image for BCL2 signal shows 6 loci which represent two intact and two derivative chromosomes 18, and two derivative chromosomes 14. Merged image shows green IGH signals and red BCL2 signals which overlap in four loci, arrows (two copies of derivative chromosome 14 and two copies of derivative chromosome 18). Right panel, IGH break-apart probe (green/red) signal showing four green and four red foci indicative of the presence of four rearranged IGH loci
Fig. 4Schematic representation of the rearrangements described in clone 1 and clone 2. Chromosomes involved in rearrangements are shown on the right. a Rearrangements in clone 1 involving IGH (14q32) and BCL3 (19q13.1) which results in two derivative chromosomes (der(19) and der(14). Rearranged chromosomes 14 and 19 are indicated by an arrow on the right. b Rearrangements in clone 2 which includes chromosome duplication event and IGH (14q32) and BCL2 (18q21) translocation in addition to IGH;BCL3 rearrangements. Therefore clone 2 contains 8 derivative chromosomes (a pair of each der(19), der(18), der(14)t(14;19), and der(14)t(14;18)). Rearranged chromosomes 18 and 19 are indicated by the arrows on the right
Fig. 5Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) array analysis. a Confirmation of an extra copy of chromosome 12. In the Log R ratio panel (left) chromosomal boundaries between the q terminal of chromosome 11, chromosome 12, and the p terminal of chromosome 13 are demarcated by lines. The expanded chromosome 12 view (right), shows an isolated view of chromosome 12 (B-Allele frequency). b Microduplication of the genomic region containing ERCC2 gene. c Genomic mapping of ERCC2 gene located in the 19q13.32 cytogenetic band, proximal to the BCL3 gene locus (19q13.31). d Placement of the ERCC2 gene relative to the hypothesized IGH;BCL3 rearrangement junction depicted in the schematics (the possibility exists that ERCC2 duplication occurred on the non-translocated chromosome 19 as stated in text)