WT1 mutations in T-ALL

The molecular mechanisms involved in disease progression and relapse in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) are poorly understood. We used single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis to analyze paired diagnostic and relapsed T-ALL samples to identify recurrent genetic alterations in T-ALL....

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2009-07, Vol.114 (5), p.1038-1045
Hauptverfasser: Tosello, Valeria, Mansour, Marc R., Barnes, Kelly, Paganin, Maddalena, Sulis, Maria Luisa, Jenkinson, Sarah, Allen, Christopher G., Gale, Rosemary E., Linch, David C., Palomero, Teresa, Real, Pedro, Murty, Vundavalli, Yao, Xiaopan, Richards, Susan M., Goldstone, Anthony, Rowe, Jacob, Basso, Giuseppe, Wiernik, Peter H., Paietta, Elisabeth, Pieters, Rob, Horstmann, Martin, Meijerink, Jules P.P., Ferrando, Adolfo A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The molecular mechanisms involved in disease progression and relapse in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) are poorly understood. We used single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis to analyze paired diagnostic and relapsed T-ALL samples to identify recurrent genetic alterations in T-ALL. This analysis showed that diagnosis and relapsed cases have common genetic alterations, but also that relapsed samples frequently lose chromosomal markers present at diagnosis, suggesting that relapsed T-ALL emerges from an ancestral clone different from the major leukemic population at diagnosis. In addition, we identified deletions and associated mutations in the WT1 tumor suppressor gene in 2 of 9 samples. Subsequent analysis showed WT1 mutations in 28 of 211 (13.2%) of pediatric and 10 of 85 (11.7%) of adult T-ALL cases. WT1 mutations present in T-ALL are predominantly heterozygous frameshift mutations resulting in truncation of the C-terminal zinc finger domains of this transcription factor. WT1 mutations are most prominently found in T-ALL cases with aberrant rearrangements of the oncogenic TLX1, TLX3, and HOXA transcription factor oncogenes. Survival analysis demonstrated that WT1 mutations do not confer adverse prognosis in pediatric and adult T-ALL. Overall, these results identify the presence of WT1 mutations as a recurrent genetic alteration in T-ALL.
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2008-12-192039