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Acquisition of genome-wide copy number alterations in monozygotic twins with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Authors :
Bateman, C
Colman, S
Chaplin, T
Young, B
Eden, T
Bhakta, M
Gratias, E
van Wering, E
Cazzaniga, G
Harrison, C
Hain, R
Ancliff, P
Ford, A
Kearney, L
Greaves, M
Bateman, Caroline M
Colman, Susan M
Chaplin, Tracy
Young, Bryan D
Eden, Tim O
Bhakta, Manoo
Gratias, Eric J
van Wering, Elisabeth R
Cazzaniga, Giovanni
Harrison, Christine J
Hain, Richard
Ancliff, Philip
Ford, Anthony M
Kearney, Lyndal
Greaves, Mel
Bateman, C
Colman, S
Chaplin, T
Young, B
Eden, T
Bhakta, M
Gratias, E
van Wering, E
Cazzaniga, G
Harrison, C
Hain, R
Ancliff, P
Ford, A
Kearney, L
Greaves, M
Bateman, Caroline M
Colman, Susan M
Chaplin, Tracy
Young, Bryan D
Eden, Tim O
Bhakta, Manoo
Gratias, Eric J
van Wering, Elisabeth R
Cazzaniga, Giovanni
Harrison, Christine J
Hain, Richard
Ancliff, Philip
Ford, Anthony M
Kearney, Lyndal
Greaves, Mel
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Chimeric fusion genes are highly prevalent in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and are mostly prenatal, early genetic events in the evolutionary trajectory of this cancer. ETV6-RUNX1-positive ALL also has multiple ( approximately 6 per case) copy number alterations (CNAs) as revealed by genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism arrays. Recurrent CNAs are probably "driver" events contributing critically to clonal diversification and selection, but at diagnosis, their developmental timing is "buried" in the leukemia's covert natural history. This conundrum can be resolved with twin pairs. We identified and compared CNAs in 5 pairs of monozygotic twins with concordant ETV6-RUNX1-positive ALL and 1 pair discordant for ETV6-RUNX1 positive ALL. We compared, within each pair, CNAs classified as potential "driver" or "passenger" mutations based upon recurrency and, where known, gene function. An average of 5.1 (range 3-11) CNAs (excluding immunoglobulin/T-cell receptor alterations) were identified per case. All "driver" CNAs (total of 32) were distinct within each of the 5 twin pairs with concordant ALL. "Driver" CNAs in another twin with ALL were all absent in the shared ETV6-RUNX1-positive preleukemic clone of her healthy co-twin. These data place all "driver" CNAs secondary to the prenatal gene fusion event and most probably postnatal in the sequential, molecular pathogenesis of ALL.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308937770
Document Type :
Electronic Resource