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T cell receptor gamma (TCRG) gene rearrangements in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia refelct 'end-stage' recombinations: implications for minimal residual disease monitoring.

Authors :
Szczepański, T
Langerak, A W
Willemse, M J
Wolvers-Tettero, I L M
van Wering, E R
van Dongen, J J M
Szczepański, T
Wolvers-Tettero, I L
van Dongen, J J
Source :
Leukemia (08876924). Jul2000, Vol. 14 Issue 7, p1208-1214. 7p.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

The T cell receptor gamma (TCRG) gene configuration was established in a large series of 126 T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) patients using combined Southern blotting (SB) and heteroduplex PCR analyses. The vast majority of TALL (96%) displayed clonal TCRG gene rearrangements, with biallelic recombination in 91% of patients. A small immature subgroup of CD3- T-ALL (n = 5) had both TCRG genes in germline configuration, three of them having also germline TCRD genes. In five patients (4%) combined SB and PCR results indicated oligoclonality. In five rearrangements detected by SB, the Vgamma gene segment could not be identified suggesting illegitimate recombination. Altogether, 83% of TCRG gene rearrangements involved either the most upstream Vgamma2 gene (including four cases with interstitial deletion of 170 bp in Vgamma2) and/or the most downstream Jgamma2.3 segment, which can be perceived as 'end-stage' recombinations. Comparative analysis of the TCRG gene configuration in the major immunophenotypic subgroups indicated that TCRgammadelta+ T-ALL display a less mature immunogenotype as compared to TCRalphabeta+ and most CD3- cases. This was reflected by a significantly increased usage of the more downstream Vgamma genes and the upstream Jgamma1 segments. Comparison between adult and pediatric T-ALL patients did not show any obvious differences in TCRG gene configuration. The high frequency, easy detectability, rare oligoclonality, and frequent 'end-stage' recombinations make TCRG gene rearrangements principal targets for PCR-based detection of minimal residual disease (MRD) in T-ALL. We propose a simple heteroduplex PCR strategy, applying five primer combinations, which results in the detection of approximately 95% of all clonal TCRG gene rearrangements in T-ALL. This approach enables identification of at least one TCRG target for MRD monitoring in 95% of patients, and even two targets in 84% of T-ALL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08876924
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Leukemia (08876924)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8883229