Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (
topoisomerase
)
9,166
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The human tri-thorax gene (HRX) also called
ALL-1
(Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia-1) as well as MLL (Myeloid-lymphoid or Mixed-lineage Leukemia) gene, is disrupted in the majority of leukemias with chromosomal abnormalities involving 11q23. The alteration of the gene is related to leukemogenesis of various types such as acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and acute mixed lineage leukemia. The gene is also rearranged in cases of secondary AML developing after exposure to chemotherapeutic agents, especially
topoisomerase
II inhibitors. In at least one report, genomic analysis of this recombination site showed the breakpoint to be a
topoisomerase
II binding site and that exposure to the inhibitor could induce the rearrangement. If exposure induces the rearrangement of the gene, secondary ALL as well as secondary AML could occur after exposure to these agents, because the type of leukemias with rearranged HRX gene is not limited to AML. We present here such a case of secondary ALL with this gene rearrangement which occurred during adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer. Although less cases of secondary ALL are reported in comparison with those of secondary AML, such case reports have been accumulating. The incidence of this type of leukemia should be clarified in the future.
...
PMID:HRX gene rearrangement in secondary acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 754 29
We report a case of therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML), M4 FAB subtype, with t(10;11)(p14;q21) chromosome abnormality developed in a patient treated for acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) after 4 years of continuous complete remission (CCR). Two distinct forms of t-AML have been described: the classical type and the second type. Our case has many characteristics in common with the second type of t-AML such as: exposure to
topoisomerase
II active agents (idarubicin (IDA), mitoxantrone (MITOX), etoposide (VP16)), M4 FAB subtype, a latency period of 39 months and absence of a preleukemic phase. However, it differs in the chromosome 11 breakpoint (band q21 instead of q23) and absence of
ALL-1
(Hrx, MLL, Htrx) gene involvement. This can represent the second observation of t-AML occurring after treatment for APL.
...
PMID:Therapy-related acute myelomonocytic leukemia following successful treatment for acute promyelocytic leukemia. 765 28
We examined clinical, morphologic, and cytogenetic features and
ALL-1
(MLL, Htrxl, HRX) gene rearrangements in 17 cases of secondary leukemia that occurred 11 months to 9 years from diagnoses of primary cancers in children who received
topoisomerase
II inhibitors or developed secondary leukemias typical of those associated with this therapy. Primary diagnoses included nine solid tumors and eight leukemias. Ten secondary leukemias were acute myeloid leukemia (AML), one was of mixed lineage, two were acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and four presented as myelodysplasia. Of 15 cases with 11q23 involvement, 11 (73%) were cytogenetically identifiable; four cases had molecular rearrangement only. By Southern blot, rearrangements within the
ALL-1
gene were similar to sporadic cases. The results of this analysis suggest the following: (1) In most pediatric cases of
topoisomerase
II inhibitor-associated leukemia, there is disruption of the breakpoint cluster region of the
ALL-1
gene at chromosomal band 11q23. (2) Exposure histories vary in secondary 11q23 leukemia, as the only
topoisomerase
II inhibitor was dactinomycin in one case, and, in another case, no
topoisomerase
II inhibitor was administered. (3) There is clinical, morphologic, cytogenetic, and molecular heterogeneity in pediatric secondary 11q23 leukemia. (4) There are some survivors of pediatric secondary 11q23 leukemia, but the outcome is most often fatal.
...
PMID:ALL-1 gene rearrangements in DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor-related leukemia in children. 775 57
DNA rearrangements caused by chromosome translocations between band 11q23 and various chromosomes can be detected by a single probe, B859, an 859-base pair complementary DNA fragment derived from the human
ALL-1
gene. To try to understand why band 11q23 becomes a frequent target of the translocations, we have sequenced the entire breakpoint cluster region, a 8342-base pair BamHI genomic fragment delineated by B859. We found eight Alu repeats located within this region in the same orientation as the
ALL-1
gene. We have also analyzed the sequences of the breakpoints in 10 patients with 6 different types of 11q23 aberration. In five patients the breaks coincided with Alu sequences on chromosome 11, but not on the partner chromosomes. Also, seven of the breaks occurred in the region delineated by exons 6 and 7, which is composed mainly of Alu sequences. In three patients
topoisomerase
II recognition site-like sequences, at different stringency levels, were identified at the breakpoints on chromosome 11. We conclude that while there is no specific sequence element present at all the breakpoints, the high density of Alu sequences in the breakpoint cluster region possibly makes the latter more prone to recombination events.
...
PMID:Sequence analysis of the breakpoint cluster region in the ALL-1 gene involved in acute leukemia. 816 75
We have examined a t(9;11)(p22;q23) chromosome translocation in an acute myeloid leukemia of an infant. The breakpoints on the two chromosomes occurred within introns of the involved genes: AF-9 on chromosome 9, and
ALL-1
on chromosome 11. Sequence analysis identified heptamers flanking the breakpoints on both chromosomes 9 and 11, suggesting that the V-D-J recombinase was involved in the translocation. The presence of an N-region between the two chromosomes supports the hypothesis that a mistake in V-D-J joining was involved in the genesis of the translocation and indicates that terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase was expressed in the cells from which this acute myeloid leukemia originated. In addition, potential
topoisomerase
II DNA-binding sites were found near the breakpoints of both chromosomes, suggesting the involvement of altered
topoisomerase
II activity in this translocation. Altered
topoisomerase
II activity in the presence of an active V-D-J recombinase may be a pathogenetic mechanism of acute myeloid leukemia with rearrangements at 11q23.
...
PMID:Potential topoisomerase II DNA-binding sites at the breakpoints of a t(9;11) chromosome translocation in acute myeloid leukemia. 840 20
Three patients with secondary acute leukaemia after treatment with
topoisomerase
II inhibitor agents are described. Two patients had acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). FAB M5a, one had pro-B-acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). The interval between initiation of chemotherapy and the onset of secondary acute leukaemia was 19-20 months. 11q23 rearrangements were detected in all cases. They were due to translocations t(11;19) (q23;p13.3), t(11;16)(q23;p13) and t(4;11)(q21;q23), respectively. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with Yeast Artificial Chromosome (YAC) probe 13HH4 spanning the
ALL-1
gene on 11q23 confirmed that in each case the
ALL-1
gene had been disrupted by the translocations. The study underlined the relationship between the development of secondary acute leukaemias with 11q23 rearrangement and previous chemotherapy with topisomerase II inhibitor agents. So far, however, only six adult patients with secondary ALL with t(4;11) after treatment with
topoisomerase
II inhibitor agents have been reported. All with t(4;11) mostly occurs in infants or young children. Our patient received epirubicin continuously for >19 months. This indicates that both myeloid and lymphoid leukaemias with involvement of the
ALL-1
gene can be induced by exogenous agents, especially
topoisomerase
II inhibitors. Thus they may have a common biological background. This hypothesis was substantiated by means of combined immunophenotyping and FISH (FICTION). In the case of AML M5a with t(11;19), the tumour cells with
ALL-1
rearrangement expressed CD34. Moreover, the pro-B-ALL with t(4;11) was CD34 positive. These findings suggest that the cell of origin of secondary AML and ALL with 11q23 rearrangement is an immature haemopoietic progenitor cell.
...
PMID:Secondary acute leukaemias with 11q23 rearrangement: clinical, cytogenetic, FISH and FICTION studies. 861 34
Treatment-related acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML) following successful therapy of a primary malignancy has been recognized with increasing frequency among cancer survivors over the past several years. Many of these t-AML cases are associated with the use of intensive chemotherapy regimens that employ one or more agents which target eukaryotic
topoisomerase
II (topo II), and demonstrate non-random chromosomal translocations involving either the MLL (
ALL-1
, HRX) gene at 11q23 or the AML1 gene at 21q22. Although many investigators have speculated that these translocations are induced by the therapeutic use of topo II inhibitors, the molecular sequence of events by which topo II inhibitors might induce a chromosomal translocation are not well understood. We describe here the reproducible induction of highly specific, double-strand DNA cleavage at a specific site within the AML1 locus by topo II inhibitors. This DNA cleavage, which maps to a region of the AML1 locus frequently disrupted by chromosomal translocations, can be induced in several cell lines, with multiple different topo II inhibitors, indicating that this phenomenon is not restricted to a specific cell type or specific topo II inhibitor. It is conceivable that site-specific double-strand DNA cleavage within the AML1 locus induced by topo II inhibitors represents the initial molecular event leading to a chromosomal translocation and t-AML.
...
PMID:Topoisomerase II inhibitors induce DNA double-strand breaks at a specific site within the AML1 locus. 909 88
Rearrangements of the
ALL-1
/MLL1 gene underlie the majority of infant acute leukaemias, as well as of therapy-related leukaemias developing in cancer patients treated with inhibitors of
topoisomerase
II, such as VP16 and doxorubicin. The rearrangements fuse
ALL-1
to any of >50 partner genes or to itself. Here, we describe the unique features of
ALL-1
-associated leukaemias, and recent progress in understanding molecular mechanisms involved in the activity of the ALL-1 protein and of its Drosophila homologue TRITHORAX.
...
PMID:ALL-1/MLL1, a homologue of Drosophila TRITHORAX, modifies chromatin and is directly involved in infant acute leukaemia. 1497 Aug 49
The emergence of therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML) has been associated with DNA topoisomerase II (TOP2)-targeted drug treatments and chromosomal translocations frequently involving the MLL, or
ALL-1
, gene. Two distinct mechanisms have been implicated as potential triggers of t-AML translocations: TOP2-mediated DNA cleavage and apoptotic higher-order chromatin fragmentation. Assessment of the role of TOP2 in this process has been hampered by a lack of techniques allowing in vivo mapping of TOP2-mediated DNA cleavage at nucleotide resolution in single-copy genes. A novel method, extension ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction (ELMPCR), was used here for mapping
topoisomerase
-mediated DNA strand breaks and apoptotic DNA cleavage across a translocation-prone region of MLL in human cells. We report the first genomic map integrating translocation breakpoints and topoisomerase I, TOP2, and apoptotic DNA cleavage sites at nucleotide resolution across an MLL region harboring a t-AML translocation hotspot. This hotspot is flanked by a TOP2 cleavage site and is localized at one extremity of a minor apoptotic cleavage region, where multiple single- and double-strand breaks were induced by caspase-activated apoptotic nucleases. This cleavage pattern was in sharp contrast to that observed approximately 200 bp downstream in the exon 12 region, which displayed much stronger apoptotic cleavage but where no double-strand breaks were detected and no t-AML-associated breakpoints were reported. The localization and remarkable clustering of the t-AML breakpoints cannot be explained simply by the DNA cleavage patterns but might result from potential interactions between TOP2 poisoning, apoptotic DNA cleavage, and DNA repair attempts at specific sites of higher-order chromatin structure in apoptosis-evading cells. ELMPCR provides a new tool for investigating the role of DNA topoisomerases in fundamental genetic processes and translocations associated with cancer treatments involving
topoisomerase
-targeted drugs.
...
PMID:Nucleotide-resolution mapping of topoisomerase-mediated and apoptotic DNA strand scissions at or near an MLL translocation hotspot. 1703 56