| Literature DB >> 32817792 |
Yao Guo1,2, Honghua Sun1,3, Dengyang Zhang1, Yuming Zhao1, Mingxia Shi4, Ming Yang5, Shu Xing5, Xueqi Fu5, Ting Bin6, Bo Lu6, Shunjie Wu6, Xiaojun Xu6, Xuesong Xu7, Yun Chen1, Zhizhuang Joe Zhao2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a malignant hematological neoplasm of myeloid progenitor cells. Mutations of FLT3 in its tyrosine kinase domain (FLT3-TKD) are found in ~ 8% of patients with AML, with D835Y as the most common substitution. This mutation activates survival signals that drives the disease and is resistant to the first generation FLT3 inhibitors. Development of a highly sensitive method to detect FLT3D835Y is important to direct therapeutic options, predict prognosis, and monitor minimal residual disease in patients with AML. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; Detection of mutations; FLT3-TKD; Tyrosine kinase
Year: 2020 PMID: 32817792 PMCID: PMC7424998 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-020-00210-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Fig. 1Development of RFN-AS-PCR for detection of FLT3D835Y. a. Schematic illustration of the RFN-AS-PCR method. b and c The sensitivities of nested AS-PCR and RFN-AS-PCR methods were determined by using purified plasmid DNAs. Mixtures of FLT3 plasmid DNAs containing the indicated percentages of the FLT3D835Y mutant were amplified with primers F1_5 and F1_3. The PCR products were left undigested (b) or digested with restriction enzyme EcoRV (c) and then subjected to nested AS-PCR analyses with a primer mixture containing F1_5n, F1_3n, F1_mut, and F1_wt. The final PCR products were analyzed on 3% agarose gel, and DNA bands were visualized by staining with SYBR green. The positions of wild type FLT3- and mutant FLT3D835Y-specfic products are indicated. The higher molecular weight bands shared by both wild type FLT3 and mutant FLT3D835Y are products of primer pairs F1_5n/F1_3n (403 bp), F1_5/F1_3, F1_5n/F1_3, and/or F1_5/F1_3n
Fig. 2Validation of the RFN-AS-PCR method by using mixtures of DNA samples from FLT3D835Y mutant and wild type AML blood samples. a Screening of 13 AML blood samples by using RFN-AS-PCR identified AML11 as a FLT3D835Y-positive case. b Verification of FLT3D835Y positivity in AML11 by Sanger sequencing. c and d Blood cell DNAs from AML11 and a patient with wild type FLT3 were mixed in the indicated proportions. AS-PCR was performed without EcoRV digestion (panel c) or with EcoRV digestion (panel d). Note that the EcoRV digestion increased the detection sensitivity from 1 to 0.001%
Fig. 3Screening of AML samples for identification of FLT3D835Y by using RFN-AS-PCR. a Detection of FLT3D835Y in 40 patients with AML by RFN-AS-PCR. b Failure of Sanger sequencing to detect FLT3D835Y in AML24 and AML45
Fig. 4Detection of MRD by RFN-AS-PCR in an AML patient with FLT3D835Y. Blood DNA samples from an AML patient at initial diagnosis (AML11–1), in remission after treatment (AML11–2), and after relapse (AML11–3) were analyzed for FLT3D835Y using Sanger sequencing (a) and RFN-AS-PCR (b). Note that AML11–2 is FLT3D835Y-positive based on RFN-AS-PCR but negative according to Sanger sequencing. Ten additional FLT3D835Y-negative AML samples were analyzed in parallel