Alterations of p53 and c-myc in the clonal evolution of malignant lymphoma

Author:

Chang H1,Benchimol S1,Minden MD1,Messner HA1

Affiliation:

1. Ontario Cancer Institute, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Abstract

Abstract We derived the lymphoma cell lines OCI-Ly 13.1 and OCI-Ly 13.2 from a patient with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma at the time of presentation and during chemotherapy-resistant relapse. These lines were of T-cell phenotype and contained the identical T-cell receptor beta-chain rearrangement, indicating that both lines were members of the same malignant clone. The lines differed in their growth characteristics; OCI-Ly 13.1 grew slowly and required growth factors for colony formation, whereas OCI-Ly 13.2 grew rapidly and formed colonies without addition of growth factors. To test whether or not these biologic differences were associated with specific genetic changes, we evaluated the status of the c-myc and p53 genes of both cell lines. The p53 and c- myc genes of OCI-Ly 13.1 were in germline configuration and produced normal-sized transcripts. The p53 protein expressed in OCI-Ly 13.1 was recognized by the anti-p53 monoclonal antibody, PAb240, indicating a conformation typical of p53 proteins expressed by p53 alleles containing a missense mutation. However, sequencing studies of the entire p53 coding region did not reveal any point mutations. In contrast, the cell line OCI-Ly 13.2 contained structural abnormalities of both the c-myc and p53 genes. In addition, one of the p53 alleles was lost as determined by a cDNA probe for the p53 gene (17p 13.1) and the YNZ22.1 probe (17p 13.3). These changes resulted in the absence of p53 protein and mRNA in OCI-Ly 13.2 as detected by immunoprecipitation and Northern blot analysis, respectively. They may be a reflection of disease progression and may be associated with the altered behavior of the malignant cell population within the patient and in vitro.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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