| Literature DB >> 30606612 |
Réka Mózes1, Ambrus Gángó1, Adrienn Sulák2, Livia Vida3, Lilla Reiniger4, Botond Timár1, Tibor Krenács4, Hussain Alizadeh5, Tamás Masszi6, Júlia Gaál-Weisinger7, Judit Demeter7, Judit Csomor4, András Matolcsy1, Béla Kajtár8, Csaba Bödör9.
Abstract
Mutations of the multifunctional protein calreticulin (CALR) are recognised as one of the main driver alterations involved in the pathogenesis of Philadelphia negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (Ph- MPN) and also represent a major diagnostic criterion in the most recent World Health Organization classification of myeloid neoplasms. Nowadays, quantitative assessment of the driver mutations is gaining importance, as recent studies demonstrated the clinical relevance of the mutation load reflecting the size of the mutant clone. Here, we performed for the first time a manual and automated quantitative assessment of the CALR mutation load at protein level using CAL2, a recently developed CALR mutation specific monoclonal antibody, on a cohort of 117 patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) or primary myelofibrosis (PMF) and compared the CALR protein mutation loads with the CALR mutation load values established by a molecular assay. Eighteen different CALR mutations were detected in the cohort of the 91 CALR mutant cases. Mutation loads of the CALR mutations were between 13% and 94% with mean value in PMF cases significantly higher than ET cases (49.94 vs 41.09; t-test, p=0.004). Cases without CALR mutation (n=26) showed no or only minimal labelling with the CAL2 antibody, while all 18 different types of CALR mutations were associated with CAL2 labelling. The CALR mutation load showed a significant correlation (p=0.03) with the occurrence of major thrombotic events, with higher mutation load in patients presenting with these complications. We report a 100% concordance between the mutation status determined by immunohistochemistry and the CALR molecular assay, and we extend the applicability of this approach to 16 rare CALR mutations previously not analysed at protein level.Entities:
Keywords: CAL2 immunohistochemistry; Myeloproliferative neoplasms; calreticulin mutation; mutation load
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30606612 DOI: 10.1016/j.pathol.2018.11.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathology ISSN: 0031-3025 Impact factor: 5.306