Affiliation:
1. From the Leukaemia Research Fund Centre, Institute of Cancer Research, Chester Beatty Laboratories, London; the Cytogenetics Laboratory, Department of Haematology, Royal Free Hospital, London; the Immunogenetics Laboratory, St Mary's Hospital, Manchester; and the Academic Unit of Paediatric Oncology, Christie Hospital and Royal Manchester Children's NHS Trusts, United Kingdom.
Abstract
The occurrence of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in 2 of 3 triplets provided a unique opportunity for the investigation of leukemogenesis and the natural history of ALL. The 2 leukemic triplets were monozygotic twins and shared an identical, acquiredTEL-AML1 genomic fusion sequence indicative of a single-cell origin in utero in one fetus followed by dissemination of clonal progeny to the comonozygotic twin by intraplacental transfer. In accord with this interpretation, clonotypic TEL-AML1 fusion sequences could be amplified from the archived neonatal blood spots of the leukemic twins. The blood spot of the third, healthy, dizygotic triplet was also fusion gene positive in a single segment, though at age 3 years, his blood was found negative by sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) screening for the genomic sequence and by reverse transcription–PCR. Leukemic cells in both twins had, in addition toTEL-AML1 fusion, a deletion of the normal, nonrearrangedTEL allele. However, this genetic change was found by fluorescence in situ hybridization to be subclonal in both twins. Furthermore, mapping of the genomic boundaries of TELdeletions using microsatellite markers indicated that they were individually distinct in the twins and therefore must have arisen as independent and secondary events, probably after birth. These data support a multihit temporal model for the pathogenesis of the common form of childhood leukemia.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
85 articles.
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