Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Abnormalities of chromosome band 8p11 in leukemia: Two clinical syndromes can be distinguished on the basis of MOZ involvement

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Sally Coulthard, Dr Anne Lennard

Downloads

Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.


Abstract

Two distinct leukemia syndromes are associated with abnormalities of chromosome band 8p11. First, a myeloproliferative disorder with features characteristic of both chronic myeloid leukemia and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and second, an acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with French-American-British (FAB) M4/5 morphology and prominent erythrophagocytosis. The two syndromes are exemplified by a t(8;13)(p11;q12) and a t(8;16)(p11;p13), respectively, but cytogenetic variants of both have been described. Recently, the t(8;16) has been cloned and shown to fuse the MOZ gene at 8p11 to the CBP gene at 16p13. We have used fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), Southern blotting, and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to refine the 8p11 breakpoint in three cases with t(8;13)(p11;q12) and in a single case of AML-M5 with a clinical picture apparently identical to that found in patients with a t(8;16), but characterized by an inv(8)(p11q13). FISH analysis was performed with several 8p11 CEPH yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones. YAC 782H11 was centromeric to the one case with t(8;13) tested, but was telomeric to the inv(8). YAC 847B12 was telomeric to both the t(8;13) and the inv(8), whereas YAC 829D12 was centromeric to the t(8;13), but split by the inv(8). Southern blotting and PCR of YAC 829D12 showed that it contained the MOZ gene. A 900-bp MOZ fragment encompassing the published t(8;16) breakpoint was amplified by PCR from normal peripheral blood leukocyte cDNA and used to probe Southern blots of patient DNA. A rearrangement was detected in the case with inv(8), but not in any of the three cases with t(8;13). Southern blotting with a CBP probe and RT-PCR with MOZ and CBP primers suggested that the inv(8) does not result in a cryptic MOZ-CBP fusion. It is likely, therefore, that MOZ is fused to a novel gene at 8q13 in this case, We conclude that the t(8;13) breakpoint is flanked by YACs 782H11 and 847B12 and is at least 1 Mb telomeric to MOZ. MOZ is involved, however, in a new variant of the t(8;16). (C) 1997 by The American Society of Hematology.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Aguiar RCT, Chase A, Coulthard SA, Macdonald DHC, Carapeti M, Reiter A, Sohal J, Lennard AL, Goldman JM, Cross NCP

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Unknown

Journal: Blood

Year: 1997

Volume: 90

Issue: 8

Pages: 3130-3135

Print publication date: 01/10/1997

ISSN (print): 0006-4971

ISSN (electronic): 1528-0020


Share