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A common novel splice variant of SLC22A1 (OCT1) is associated with impaired responses to imatinib in patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia

Authors :
John M. Goldman
Juan M. Alonso-Dominguez
Jane F. Apperley
Gareth Gerrard
Mikel Valgañon
Dragana Milojkovic
Jacob Grinfeld
Georgios Nteliopoulos
David Marin
Corinne Hedgley
Richard E. Clark
Deborah L. White
Stephen J. O'Brien
Mary Alikian
Sakuntala Ale
Letizia Foroni
Grinfeld, Jacob
Gerrard, Gareth
Alikian, Mary
Alonso-Dominguez, Juan
Ale, Sakuntala
Valgañon, Mikel
Nteliopoulos, Georgios
White, Deborah
Marin, David
Hedgley, Corinne
O'Brien, Stephen
Clark, Richard
Goldman, John M
Milojkovic, Dragana
Apperley, Jane F
Foroni, Letizia
Source :
British journal of haematology. 163(5)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Approximately one-third of patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia will fail to achieve or maintain responses to imatinib. Changes in solute carrier family 22 (organic cation transporter), member 1 (SLC22A1, also termed OCT1), the main transporter for imatinib, have been proposed as a possible predictive factor. We analysed SLC22A1 mRNA levels and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located in exon 7 in 153 diagnostic whole blood samples from two patient cohorts. The level of SLC22A1 expression did not significantly correlate with imatinib failure or achievement of molecular remission. The SNP 408V>M (g.1222G>A) was present in 65% of patients and was associated in all cases with an eight base-pair insertion (8+ allele) at the 3′ end of exon 7. The latter generates an alternative splice site, leading to a premature stop codon. M420del was found in 33% of patients and never in cis with 8+ (the 3 allele). Significantly longer times to 1% and 0 1% molecular responses (by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction) were seen in patients with 8+8+ or 8+N compared to those with the remaining four genotypes (N = no insertion or deletion). Patients lacking 8+ and 3 (NN, 18%) showed the best outcomes overall. Thus, while SLC22A1 expression does not appear to affect response, alterations in its splicing or amino acid sequence may do so. Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

ISSN :
13652141
Volume :
163
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British journal of haematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86297e655458f22777a6e0a43146568f