| Literature DB >> 27198719 |
Lesley-Ann Sutton1, Emma Young1, Panagiotis Baliakas1, Anastasia Hadzidimitriou2, Theodoros Moysiadis2, Karla Plevova3, Davide Rossi4, Jana Kminkova3, Evangelia Stalika2, Lone Bredo Pedersen5, Jitka Malcikova3, Andreas Agathangelidis6, Zadie Davis7, Larry Mansouri1, Lydia Scarfò6, Myriam Boudjoghra8, Alba Navarro9, Alice F Muggen10, Xiao-Jie Yan11, Florence Nguyen-Khac8, Marta Larrayoz12, Panagiotis Panagiotidis13, Nicholas Chiorazzi11, Carsten Utoft Niemann5, Chrysoula Belessi14, Elias Campo9, Jonathan C Strefford12, Anton W Langerak10, David Oscier7, Gianluca Gaidano4, Sarka Pospisilova3, Frederic Davi8, Paolo Ghia6, Kostas Stamatopoulos15, Richard Rosenquist16.
Abstract
We report on markedly different frequencies of genetic lesions within subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients carrying mutated or unmutated stereotyped B-cell receptor immunoglobulins in the largest cohort (n=565) studied for this purpose. By combining data on recurrent gene mutations (BIRC3, MYD88, NOTCH1, SF3B1 and TP53) and cytogenetic aberrations, we reveal a subset-biased acquisition of gene mutations. More specifically, the frequency of NOTCH1 mutations was found to be enriched in subsets expressing unmutated immunoglobulin genes, i.e. #1, #6, #8 and #59 (22-34%), often in association with trisomy 12, and was significantly different (P<0.001) to the frequency observed in subset #2 (4%, aggressive disease, variable somatic hypermutation status) and subset #4 (1%, indolent disease, mutated immunoglobulin genes). Interestingly, subsets harboring a high frequency of NOTCH1 mutations were found to carry few (if any) SF3B1 mutations. This starkly contrasts with subsets #2 and #3 where, despite their immunogenetic differences, SF3B1 mutations occurred in 45% and 46% of cases, respectively. In addition, mutations within TP53, whilst enriched in subset #1 (16%), were rare in subsets #2 and #8 (both 2%), despite all being clinically aggressive. All subsets were negative for MYD88 mutations, whereas BIRC3 mutations were infrequent. Collectively, this striking bias and skewed distribution of mutations and cytogenetic aberrations within specific chronic lymphocytic leukemia subsets implies that the mechanisms underlying clinical aggressiveness are not uniform, but rather support the existence of distinct genetic pathways of clonal evolution governed by a particular stereotyped B-cell receptor selecting a certain molecular lesion(s). Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27198719 PMCID: PMC4967575 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2016.141812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941