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A comprehensive analysis of the CDKN2A gene in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia reveals genomic deletion, copy number neutral loss of heterozygosity and association with specific cytogenetic subgroups.

A comprehensive analysis of the CDKN2A gene in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia reveals genomic deletion, copy number neutral loss of heterozygosity and association with specific cytogenetic subgroups.
A comprehensive analysis of the CDKN2A gene in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia reveals genomic deletion, copy number neutral loss of heterozygosity and association with specific cytogenetic subgroups.
Inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene, CDKN2A, can occur by deletion, methylation, or mutation. We assessed the principal mode of inactivation in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and frequency in biologically relevant subgroups. Mutation or methylation was rare, whereas genomic deletion occurred in 21% of B-cell precursor ALL and 50% of T-ALL patients. Single nucleotide polymorphism arrays revealed copy number neutral (CNN) loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in 8% of patients. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization demonstrated that the mean size of deletions was 14.8 Mb and biallelic deletions composed a large and small deletion (mean sizes, 23.3 Mb and 1.4 Mb). Among 86 patients, only 2 small deletions were below the resolution of detection by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Patients with high hyperdiploidy, ETV6-RUNX1, or 11q23/MLL rearrangements had low rates of deletion (11%, 15%, 13%), whereas patients with t(9;22), t(1;19), TLX3, or TLX1 rearrangements had higher frequencies (61%, 42%, 78%, and 89%). In conclusion, CDKN2A deletion is a significant secondary abnormality in childhood ALL strongly correlated with phenotype and genotype. The variation in the incidence of CDKN2A deletions by cytogenetic subgroup may explain its inconsistent association with outcome. CNN LOH without apparent CDKN2A inactivation suggests the presence of other relevant genes in this region
0006-4971
100-107
Sulong, Sarina
345b2b2f-5c4a-4859-88f0-b98096de5eac
Moorman, Anthony V.
e4ced178-ee03-47ef-bc5e-25d8453951d5
Irving, Julie A.E.
316841b5-d102-4a28-b4dc-6503aeb832e0
Strefford, Jonathan C.
3782b392-f080-42bf-bdca-8aa5d6ca532f
Konn, Zoe J.
525b4648-7c88-488a-aefa-0018ac485eb4
Case, Marian C.
d27bb983-bf18-4e93-b824-288d469206b4
Minto, Lynne
4ffd3f1d-ffba-40d5-bb99-c1098dcb494b
Barber, Kerry E.
68bc6851-3dd1-4767-ad97-8de1918224db
Parker, Helen
33e0cd81-d45f-49bc-9539-09345d79d895
Wright, Sarah L.
56f2b242-4d7d-46be-838b-9064ff96d152
Stewart, Adam R.M.
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Bailey, Simon
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Bown, Nick P.
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Hall, Andrew
d88caf4d-4d33-49fe-a7de-d837dee8a1d9
Harrison, Christine J.
52da7673-509c-4b88-b92e-0c021c9c7d3e
Sulong, Sarina
345b2b2f-5c4a-4859-88f0-b98096de5eac
Moorman, Anthony V.
e4ced178-ee03-47ef-bc5e-25d8453951d5
Irving, Julie A.E.
316841b5-d102-4a28-b4dc-6503aeb832e0
Strefford, Jonathan C.
3782b392-f080-42bf-bdca-8aa5d6ca532f
Konn, Zoe J.
525b4648-7c88-488a-aefa-0018ac485eb4
Case, Marian C.
d27bb983-bf18-4e93-b824-288d469206b4
Minto, Lynne
4ffd3f1d-ffba-40d5-bb99-c1098dcb494b
Barber, Kerry E.
68bc6851-3dd1-4767-ad97-8de1918224db
Parker, Helen
33e0cd81-d45f-49bc-9539-09345d79d895
Wright, Sarah L.
56f2b242-4d7d-46be-838b-9064ff96d152
Stewart, Adam R.M.
201f6d8b-8004-4605-bfff-dd82c711bade
Bailey, Simon
0841f9a7-dfe7-48dd-9e97-5075ec6cc035
Bown, Nick P.
411ae0cc-7fc7-471f-b562-2c17090c48b2
Hall, Andrew
d88caf4d-4d33-49fe-a7de-d837dee8a1d9
Harrison, Christine J.
52da7673-509c-4b88-b92e-0c021c9c7d3e

Sulong, Sarina, Moorman, Anthony V., Irving, Julie A.E., Strefford, Jonathan C., Konn, Zoe J., Case, Marian C., Minto, Lynne, Barber, Kerry E., Parker, Helen, Wright, Sarah L., Stewart, Adam R.M., Bailey, Simon, Bown, Nick P., Hall, Andrew and Harrison, Christine J. (2009) A comprehensive analysis of the CDKN2A gene in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia reveals genomic deletion, copy number neutral loss of heterozygosity and association with specific cytogenetic subgroups. Blood, 113 (1), 100-107. (doi:10.1182/blood-2008-07-166801).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene, CDKN2A, can occur by deletion, methylation, or mutation. We assessed the principal mode of inactivation in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and frequency in biologically relevant subgroups. Mutation or methylation was rare, whereas genomic deletion occurred in 21% of B-cell precursor ALL and 50% of T-ALL patients. Single nucleotide polymorphism arrays revealed copy number neutral (CNN) loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in 8% of patients. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization demonstrated that the mean size of deletions was 14.8 Mb and biallelic deletions composed a large and small deletion (mean sizes, 23.3 Mb and 1.4 Mb). Among 86 patients, only 2 small deletions were below the resolution of detection by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Patients with high hyperdiploidy, ETV6-RUNX1, or 11q23/MLL rearrangements had low rates of deletion (11%, 15%, 13%), whereas patients with t(9;22), t(1;19), TLX3, or TLX1 rearrangements had higher frequencies (61%, 42%, 78%, and 89%). In conclusion, CDKN2A deletion is a significant secondary abnormality in childhood ALL strongly correlated with phenotype and genotype. The variation in the incidence of CDKN2A deletions by cytogenetic subgroup may explain its inconsistent association with outcome. CNN LOH without apparent CDKN2A inactivation suggests the presence of other relevant genes in this region

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Published date: January 2009
Organisations: Cancer Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 72667
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72667
ISSN: 0006-4971
PURE UUID: 8296f2b9-090a-4532-bdbb-33a76fedc119
ORCID for Jonathan C. Strefford: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0972-2881
ORCID for Helen Parker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8308-9781

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Date deposited: 22 Feb 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Sarina Sulong
Author: Anthony V. Moorman
Author: Julie A.E. Irving
Author: Zoe J. Konn
Author: Marian C. Case
Author: Lynne Minto
Author: Kerry E. Barber
Author: Helen Parker ORCID iD
Author: Sarah L. Wright
Author: Adam R.M. Stewart
Author: Simon Bailey
Author: Nick P. Bown
Author: Andrew Hall
Author: Christine J. Harrison

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