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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chromosomal rearrangements in
childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(ALL) play an important role in the identification of clinical relevant subgroups. For rapid and easy detection of the clinically most important gene rearrangements, a nested multiplex reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (multiplex PCR) was developed. This multiplex PCR enables the detection of M-BCR/ABL, m-BCR/ABL, TEL/ AML1, and MLL/AF4 fusion transcripts in one PCR reaction. However, the existence of splicing variants and different breakpoints on the DNA level hampers the discrimination of the rearrangements by their fragment size on an agarose gel. Therefore, one of the internal primers of each translocation (
ABL
-2, TEL-2, AF4-2) was labeled with a characteristic fluorescent dye, and an automatic fluorescence-based DNA fragment analysis was performed. The sensitivity of this multiplex PCR is in the same range as that of the corresponding single PCR reaction and allows a fast screening for the detection of therapy-relevant rearrangements, with a high turnover of samples.
...
PMID:Multiplex PCR--a rapid screening method for detection of gene rearrangements in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1034 46
Recent advances in cytogenetics and molecular genetics have made it possible to identify an array of genomic abnormalities with prognostic and therapeutic significance. Hyperdiploidy > 50 chromosomes and ETV6-CBFA2 fusions have been used to identify low-risk cases, and BCR-
ABL
and MLL-AF4 to define high-risk leukemias. Despite their clinical utility, the risk classification system based on these findings lack absolute precision and should be complemented with other variables, the most important of which is the early blast cell response to remission induction therapy. Studies of tumor suppressor genes and proto-oncogenes in the BCL2 family genes may unravel the mechanisms of leukemia cell progression and the development of drug resistance, leading to innovative therapies. As the cure rates for
childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(ALL) approach 80%, precise methods of risk assessment are needed to permit better selection of treatment that is neither excessive nor inadequate for individual patients. Because one or more genetic abnormalities underlie every case of leukemia, a risk assignment system based on primary genetic abnormalities has great intuitive appeal. Even though over 90% of
childhood ALL
cases can be readily classified according to numerical or gross structural chromosomal abnormalities, molecular analyses are essential to identify therapeutically relevant, submicroscopic genetic lesions not visible by karyotyping. This review focuses mainly on recent advances in genetic studies that have contributed to therapeutic advances or that hold promise for the future.
...
PMID:Genetic abnormalities and drug resistance in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1050 Aug 13
Molecular genetic and cytoimmunological markers have been applied for the detection of minimal residual disease (MRD) in hematological malignancies. These markers include surface markers or rearranged T-cell receptor and immunoglobulin genes in the lymphoid malignancies and fused genes associated with chromosomal translocations such as BCR-
ABL
in t(9;22) or PML-RAR alpha in t(15;17) in myeloid malignancies. The expression of the WT1 gene is recognized as the universal tumor marker for a wide variety of hematological malignancies. Using these sensitive markers, a tumor cell in 10,000 to 1,000,000 normal cells can be detected. By examining a large number of patients, it has been shown that the MRD in the early phase of chemotherapy has a correlation with the prognosis of
childhood ALL
. Based on these observations, a new strategy of chemotherapy in which the post-remission therapy is modified based on the MRD results has begun. The amount of tumor cells contaminated in the autologous stem cell grafts in ALL patients might be related to the prognosis. The diagnosis of MRD will be used as an important routine examination in chemotherapy for leukemia/lymphoma patients.
...
PMID:[The minimal residual disease (MRD) in hematological malignancies]. 1143 42
Treatment of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is based on the concept of tailoring the intensity of therapy to a patient's risk of relapse. To determine whether gene expression profiling could enhance risk assignment, we used oligonucleotide microarrays to analyze the pattern of genes expressed in leukemic blasts from 360
pediatric ALL
patients. Distinct expression profiles identified each of the prognostically important leukemia subtypes, including T-ALL, E2A-PBX1, BCR-
ABL
, TEL-AML1, MLL rearrangement, and hyperdiploid >50 chromosomes. In addition, another ALL subgroup was identified based on its unique expression profile. Examination of the genes comprising the expression signatures provided important insights into the biology of these leukemia subgroups. Further, within some genetic subgroups, expression profiles identified those patients that would eventually fail therapy. Thus, the single platform of expression profiling should enhance the accurate risk stratification of
pediatric ALL
patients.
...
PMID:Classification, subtype discovery, and prediction of outcome in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia by gene expression profiling. 1208 66
The TEL/
JAK2
chromosomal translocation (t(9;12)(p24;p13)) is associated with T cell
childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
. The TEL/
JAK2
fusion protein contains the
JAK2
catalytic domain and the TEL-specific oligomerization domain. TEL-mediated oligomerization of the TEL/
JAK2
proteins results in the constitutive activation of the tyrosine kinase activity. Leukemia cells expressing TEL/
JAK2
tyrosine kinase become resistant to anti-neoplastic drugs. Amifostine is a pro-drug which can selectively protect normal tissues against the toxicity of anticancer drugs and radiation. We investigated the effects of amifostine on idarubicin-induced DNA damage and repair in murine pro-B lymphoid BaF3 cells and BaF3-TEL/
JAK2
-transformed cells using alkaline single cell gel electrophoresis (comet assay). Idarubicin induced DNA damage in both cell types but amifostine reduced its extent in control non-transformed BaF3 cells and enhanced it in TEL/
JAK2
-transformed cells. The transformed cells did not show measurable DNA repair after exposure to amifostine and idarubicin, but cells treated only with idarubicin were able to recover within a 60-min incubation. Because TEL/
JAK2
-transformed cells can be considered as model cells for certain human leukemias and lymphomas we anticipate an enhancement of idarubicin cytotoxicity by amifostine in these diseases. Moreover, TEL/
JAK2
tyrosine kinase might be involved in cellular response to DNA damage. Amifostine could promote apoptosis or lower the threshold for apoptosis induction dependent on TEL/
JAK2
activation.
...
PMID:TEL/JAK2 tyrosine kinase inhibits DNA repair in the presence of amifostine. 1213 32
Multiple genes have been shown to be independently hypermethylated in lymphoid malignancies. We report here on the extent of concurrent methylation of E-cadherin, Dap-kinase, O(6)MGMT, p73, p16, p15 and p14 in 129
pediatric ALL
cases. While most of these genes demonstrated methylation in a proportion of cases, O(6)MGMT, p16 and p14 were infrequently methylated (11, 7 and 3%, respectively). Methylation of at least one gene was found in the vast majority (83%) of cases. To determine the extent and concordance of methylation we calculated a methylation index (MI=number of methylated genes/number of studied genes) for each sample. The average MI was 0.28, corresponding to 2/7 methylated genes. MI was correlated with standard prognostic factors, including immunophenotype, age, sex, WBC and presence of specific translocations (TEL-AML1, BCR-
ABL
, E2A-PBX1 or MLL-AF4). We determined that children >/=10 years old and children presenting with high WBC (>/=50 x 10(9)/l) both associated with a higher MI (P<0.01 and <0.05, respectively). T-ALLs demonstrated a lower MI (median=0.17) than precursor B ALLs (median=0.28). Among the different molecular subgroups, MLL-ALLs had the highest MI (mean=0.35), while ALLs carrying the t(1;19) had the lowest MI (mean=0.07). The most common epigenetic lesion in
childhood ALL
was methylation of E-cadherin (72%) independent of the molecular subtype or other clinicopathological factors.
...
PMID:Concurrent methylation of multiple genes in childhood ALL: Correlation with phenotype and molecular subgroup. 1297 Jul 85
Point mutations of D835/I836 of the FLT3 gene have been reported in adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML), but not in pediatric AML or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). FLT3-D835/I836 mutations were found in 6 (5.4%) of 112 children with ALL older than 1 year and in 8 (16.0%) of 50 infants with ALL. Missense mutations were found in 11 patients, 3-base pair deletions in 2 patients, and a deletion/insertion in 1 patient. Remarkably, FLT3-D835/I836 mutations were found in 8 (18.2%) of 44 infants with ALL with MLL rearrangements and in 4 (21.5%) of 19 patients with hyperdiploid ALL, but they were not found in any patients older than 1 year who had TEL-AML1 (n = 11), E2APBX1 (n = 4), or BCR-
ABL
(n = 6) fusion genes. Although infant ALL patients with mutations had poorer prognoses than did those without mutations,
pediatric ALL
patients with mutations who were older than 1 year had good prognoses. We also found FLT3-D835 mutations in 2 of 11 leukemic cell lines with MLL rearrangements. FLT3 was highly phosphorylated in these cell lines with FLT3-D835 mutations, leading to constitutive activation of downstream targets such as signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 (STAT5) without FLT3 ligand stimulation. These results suggested that FLT3-D835/I836 mutations are one of the second genetic events in infant ALL with MLL rearrangements or
pediatric ALL
with hyperdiploidy.
...
PMID:FLT3 mutations in the activation loop of tyrosine kinase domain are frequently found in infant ALL with MLL rearrangements and pediatric ALL with hyperdiploidy. 1450 97
Recent reports support a possible future application of gene expression profiling for the diagnosis of leukemias. However, the robustness of subtype-specific gene expression signatures has to be proven on independent patient samples. Here, we present gene expression data of 34 adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients (Affymetrix U133A microarrays). Support Vector Machines (SVMs) were applied to stratify our samples based on given gene lists reported to predict MLL, BCR-
ABL
, and T-ALL, as well as MLL and non-MLL gene rearrangement positive
pediatric ALL
. In addition, seven other B-precursor ALL cases not bearing t(9;22) or t(11q23)/MLL chromosomal aberrations were analyzed. Using top differentially expressed genes, hierarchical cluster and principal component analyses demonstrate that the genetically more heterogeneous B-precursor ALL samples intercalate with BCR-
ABL
-positive cases, but were clearly distinct from T-ALL and MLL profiles. Similar expression signatures were observed for both heterogeneous B-precursor ALL and for BCR-
ABL
-positive cases. As an unrelated laboratory, we demonstrate that gene signatures defined for
childhood ALL
were also capable of stratifying distinct subtypes in our cohort of adult ALL patients. As such, previously reported gene expression patterns identified by microarray technology are validated and confirmed on truly independent leukemia patient samples.
...
PMID:Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) gene expression signatures classify an independent cohort of adult ALL patients. 1460 32
The outcome for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has improved dramatically with current therapy resulting in an event free survival exceeding 75% for most patients. However significant challenges remain including developing better methods to predict which patients can be cured with less toxic treatment and which ones will benefit from augmented therapy. In addition, 25% of patients fail therapy and novel treatments that are focused on undermining specifically the leukemic process are needed urgently. In Section I, Dr. Carroll reviews current approaches to risk classification and proposes a system that incorporates well-established clinical parameters, genetic lesions of the blast as well as early response parameters. He then provides an overview of emerging technologies in genomics and proteomics and how they might lead to more rational, biologically based classification systems. In Section II, Drs. Mary Relling and Stella Davies describe emerging findings that relate to host features that influence outcome, the role of inherited germline variation. They highlight technical breakthroughs in assessing germline differences among patients. Polymorphisms of drug metabolizing genes have been shown to influence toxicity and the best example is the gene thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) a key enzyme in the metabolism of 6-mercaptopurine. Polymorphisms are associated with decreased activity that is also associated with increased toxicity. The role of polymorphisms in other genes whose products play an important role in drug metabolism as well as cytokine genes are discussed. In Sections III and IV, Drs. James Downing and Cheryl Willman review their findings using gene expression profiling to classify ALL. Both authors outline challenges in applying this methodology to analysis of clinical samples. Dr. Willman describes her laboratory's examination of infant leukemia and precursor B-ALL where unsupervised approaches have led to the identification of inherent biologic groups not predicted by conventional morphologic, immunophenotypic and cytogenetic variables. Dr. Downing describes his results from a
pediatric ALL
expression database using over 327 diagnostic samples, with 80% of the dataset consisting of samples from patients treated on a single institutional protocol. Seven distinct leukemia subtypes were identified representing known leukemia subtypes including: BCR-
ABL
, E2A-PBX1, TEL-AML1, rearrangements in the MLL gene, hyperdiploid karyotype (i.e., > 50 chromosomes), and T-ALL as well as a new leukemia subtype. A subset of genes have been identified whose expression appears to be predictive of outcome but independent verification is needed before this type of analysis can be integrated into treatment assignment. Chemotherapeutic agents kill cancer cells by activating apoptosis, or programmed cell death. In Section V, Dr. John Reed describes major apoptotic pathways and the specific role of key proteins in this response. The expression level of some of these proteins, such as BCL2, BAX, and caspase 3, has been shown to be predictive of ultimate outcome in hematopoietic tumors. New therapeutic approaches that modulate the apoptotic pathway are now available and Dr. Reed highlights those that may be applicable to the treatment of
childhood ALL
.
...
PMID:Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1463 79
In childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), cytogenetics play an important role in diagnosis, allocation of treatment and prognosis. Conventional cytogenetic analysis, involving mainly karyotyping in our experience, has not been successful in a large proportion of cases due to inadequate metaphase spreads and poor chromosome morphology. Our aim is to develop a highly sensitive and specific method to screen simultaneously for the four most frequent fusion transcripts resulting from specific chromosomal translocations, namely, both the CML- and ALLtype BCR-
ABL
transcripts of t(9;22), E2A-PBX1 transcript of t(1;19), the MLL-AF4 transcript of t(4;11) and TEL-AML1 (also termed ETV6-CBFA2) of the cryptic t(12;21). A multiplex reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction protocol (RT-PCR) was developed and tested out on archival bone marrow samples and leukaemia cell lines. In all samples with a known translocation detected by cytogenetic techniques, the same translocation was identified by the multiplex-PCR assay. Multiplex RT-PCR assay is an effective, sensitive, accurate and cost-effective diagnostic tool which can improve our ability to accurately and rapidly risk-stratify patients with
childhood ALL
.
...
PMID:Validation of a multiplex RT-PCR assay for screening significant oncogene fusion transcripts in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 1502 55
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