BCR-ABL1 lymphoblastic leukaemia is characterized by the deletion of Ikaros - PubMed (original) (raw)

. 2008 May 1;453(7191):110-4.

doi: 10.1038/nature06866. Epub 2008 Apr 13.

Christopher B Miller, Ina Radtke, Letha A Phillips, James Dalton, Jing Ma, Deborah White, Timothy P Hughes, Michelle M Le Beau, Ching-Hon Pui, Mary V Relling, Sheila A Shurtleff, James R Downing

Affiliations

BCR-ABL1 lymphoblastic leukaemia is characterized by the deletion of Ikaros

Charles G Mullighan et al. Nature. 2008.

Abstract

The Philadelphia chromosome, a chromosomal abnormality that encodes BCR-ABL1, is the defining lesion of chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) and a subset of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). To define oncogenic lesions that cooperate with BCR-ABL1 to induce ALL, we performed a genome-wide analysis of diagnostic leukaemia samples from 304 individuals with ALL, including 43 BCR-ABL1 B-progenitor ALLs and 23 CML cases. IKZF1 (encoding the transcription factor Ikaros) was deleted in 83.7% of BCR-ABL1 ALL, but not in chronic-phase CML. Deletion of IKZF1 was also identified as an acquired lesion at the time of transformation of CML to ALL (lymphoid blast crisis). The IKZF1 deletions resulted in haploinsufficiency, expression of a dominant-negative Ikaros isoform, or the complete loss of Ikaros expression. Sequencing of IKZF1 deletion breakpoints suggested that aberrant RAG-mediated recombination is responsible for the deletions. These findings suggest that genetic lesions resulting in the loss of Ikaros function are an important event in the development of BCR-ABL1 ALL.

PubMed Disclaimer

Similar articles

Cited by

Publication types

MeSH terms

Substances

LinkOut - more resources