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Query: KEGG:D03343 (
MDS
)
2,225
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The activation of protooncogenes (ras, fms and myc genes) by point mutations in hematological malignancies are described in this review. Ras mutations are found in a variety of human malignancies at codon 12, 13, and 61. Generally, N-ras mutations are frequent in hematological malignancies. Fms mutation at codon 301 and 969, which are seen in 10 to 20% cases of AML and
MDS
, increase tyrosine kinase activity of the fms products. Ras and fms mutations are postulated to influence
leukemogenesis
at rather early stages. Burkitt lymphomas are characterized by specific chromosomal translocations between c-myc gene and one of the immunoglobulin genes. Furthermore, mutations in the 3' border of the exon 1 of c-myc are frequent, and may play an additional role in pathogenesis of Burkitt lymphoma.
...
PMID:[Activation of protooncogenes by point mutations in hematological malignancies]. 151 54
Myelodysplastic syndromes originate from a pluripotent stem cell. This view, previously suggested by G-6-PD and cytogenetic investigations, has been established unequivocally by X-chromosome inactivation analysis based on DNA polymorphisms and by studies of mutated oncogenes. Two genomic alterations associated with
MDS
have been analyzed in more detail. Activation of the RAS oncogenes, preferentially N-RAS, is demonstrated in approximately 35% of
MDS
patients. Mutations in the FMS gene, encoding the CSF-1 receptor, are found in 16% of cases. Interestingly, RAS and FMS mutations are predominantly observed in disorders of myelomonoctic differentiation, i.e., the CMML subtype in
MDS
and the AML FAB type M4. Moreover, homozygous deletion of the FMS gene may be an important event in the genesis of the
MDS
variant 5q- syndrome. Preliminary data indicate that defects in tumor-suppressor genes, namely p53, may also contribute to the development of
MDS
. Different lines of evidence suggest that clinical preleukemia is preceded by a phase in which genetic alterations accumulate without any hematologic change. Cases in point are the detection of RAS and FMS mutations in healthy individuals who had been treated in the past with cytotoxic therapy for lymphoma, the frequent observation of clonal remission in AML patients, or the identification of oncogene mutations in healthy individuals without even a history of malignancy or chemotherapy. Possibly, either germline mutations of oncogenes or tumor-suppressor genes and the process of genomic imprinting may constitute additional factors that predispose hematopoietic stem cells to malignant transformation. Limited as they are, the currently available data suggest that accumulation of genomic lesions, rather than their precise order of development with respect to one another, characterize the multistep process of
leukemogenesis
in which
MDS
already represent more advanced stages. The prognostic significance of oncogene mutations in
MDS
patients is controversially discussed. This issue awaits prospective analyses taking into account the influence of treatment modalities. However, the clinical relevance of molecularly defined parameters has already been established for their use as clonal markers in determining the mode of action and efficiency of different therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic aspects of myelodysplastic syndromes. 161 6
The median latency of 2 degrees
MDS
/AL is 4 to 5 years. A high percentage of patients with 2 degrees
MDS
/AL convert to 2 degrees AL. Survival of either is less than 1 year. A constellation of morphologic abnormalities from all 3 cell lines produces a unique appearance. Both 2 degrees
MDS
and 2 degrees AL are difficult to classify by the FAB system. With the exception of the identification of karyotypic abnormalities, the biology of 2 degrees
MDS
/AL remains largely unexplored. Alterations of chromosomes 5 and 7 predominate, but other associated cytogenetic abnormalities are being increasingly recognized. A synthesis of data regarding 2 degrees
MDS
/AL resulting from the treatment of several primary malignancies generates the tentative conclusions that (a) many of the alkylating agents, and the nonclassic alkylating agent procarbazine, are leukemogens; (b) melphalan is a more potent leukemogen than cyclophosphamide. None of the other alkylating agents has been clearly established to be more or less potent than another; (c) increasing duration or amount of alkylator-based chemotherapy increases the risk of
leukemogenesis
; (d) low doses of radiation delivered to large volumes of bone marrow are weakly leukemogenic. High doses of radiation delivered to small volumes are not. Due to the latter, there is minimal additive risk for 2 degrees
MDS
/AL among studies using alkylator-based chemotherapy and radiotherapy, either concurrently or sequentially; (e) the older patient (greater than 40) is at increased risk for 2 degrees
MDS
/AL, at least in Hodgkin's disease. Children may be at lesser risk than adults, and younger children at lesser risk than older children; (f) the risk of 2 degrees
MDS
/AL peaks within the first decade after treatment for the primary malignancy. The incidence rates during the second decade are low. Identified occupational/environmental risks for 2 degrees
MDS
/AL include benzene, ambient and diagnostic radiation exposure, and perhaps ethylene oxide. The similarities in karyotype abnormalities among leukemic cells of those whose occupations expose them to chemical hazard, and those who are exposed to cytotoxic agents, suggest that many more environmental leukemogens have yet to be discovered. Karyotype is an important prognostic factor for both achievement of CR and for survival. Nonaggressive treatment approaches have not proven useful, although the use of hematopoietic growth factors offers promise in this area. Combination chemotherapy is justified in patients with adequate performance statuses and "favorable" karyotypes. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation is currently the only curative approach, and can be applied without attempts to first reduce the leukemic burden.
...
PMID:Leukemias and myelodysplastic syndromes secondary to drug, radiation, and environmental exposure. 173 70
The observation that juvenile chronic myelogenous leukemia (JCML) and childhood bone marrow monosomy 7 syndrome (Mo 7) are similar in many clinical and epidemiologic respects suggests a shared pathogenic basis and raises the possibility that the bone marrows of patients with JCML might lose chromosome 7 alleles by mechanisms that do not result in detectable cytogenetic deletions. We used a series of polymorphic markers mapped to chromosome 7 to test this hypothesis in 22 children with MPS and
MDS
, including 19 with JCML. All MPS and
MDS
samples demonstrated allelic heterozygosity with at least one chromosome 7 marker; 16 were heterozygous with probes from both 7p and 7q. Furthermore, the percentage of patient bone marrow samples heterozygous at each locus tested was similar to the frequency observed in the normal population. Whereas these data demonstrate that submicroscopic loss of large segments of chromosome 7 alleles is uncommon in children with MPS and
MDS
who do not have Mo 7, they do not exclude small deletions around an uncharacterized tumor-suppressor locus. Our results suggest that a number of distinct molecular events contribute to
leukemogenesis
, and we propose a multistep model to explain the similarities and differences between the major subtypes of childhood MPS and
MDS
.
...
PMID:Molecular evidence that childhood monosomy 7 syndrome is distinct from juvenile chronic myelogenous leukemia and other childhood myeloproliferative disorders. 753 11
The cytogenetic findings of therapy-related myeloid leukemia (t-ML) in three children are presented. These included one male patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who underwent bone marrow transplantation and developed therapy-related myeloproliferative disease (t-MPD) in the female-donor hematopoietic cells 2.5 years after receiving radiation and epipodophyllotoxin therapy for ALL testicular relapse. Bone marrow leukemic cell karyotype revealed 46,XX,add (11)(p15) and a normal female karyotype in the peripheral blood lymphocytes. The other two children, one with ALL and one with ganglioneuroblastoma, developed fatal t-MPD and therapy-related acute myeloblastic leukemia (t-AML) preceded by myelodysplastic syndrome (t-
MDS
), respectively, 5 years after diagnosis, following administration of alkylating agents and irradiation. Monosomy 7 was present in both, and was combined with inv(3)(q21q26) in the second patient. Our review of the cytogenetic findings in 91 previously reported pediatric patients with t-ML suggested that the involvement of 11p15 and 3q21-->23, 3q24-q26 with or without a combination of translocation 11q23 and -7/7q-, respectively, are nonrandom aberrations of t-ML in children. Comparison of the chromosomal changes in t-ML between the pediatric and an adult series revealed some differences which may result from differences in treatment modalities and which, in addition, may indicate a possible role of genetic and/or age-dependent factors in the pathogenesis of therapy-related
leukemogenesis
in children.
...
PMID:Involvement of 11p15 and 3q21q26 in therapy-related myeloid leukemia (t-ML) in children. Case reports and review of the literature. 803 58
Bone marrow monosomy 7 (Mo 7) is associated with childhood preleukemic myeloproliferative and myelodysplastic syndromes (MPS and
MDS
). We used a series of polymorphic markers to investigate the parental origins of chromosomes lost from the bone marrows of 12 children with MPS/
MDS
and Mo 7. Eight Mo 7 bone marrows lost a maternal chromosome 7 and four cases lost the paternal homologue. Our data and the results of previous laboratory and clinical observations in the familial and sporadic forms of childhood Mo 7 suggest that chromosome 7 deletions contribute to
leukemogenesis
by gene dosage.
...
PMID:Parental origins of chromosome 7 loss in childhood monosomy 7 syndrome. 812 52
This review deals with the differences between leukemias--induced by alkylating agents as opposed to a "new form" of treatment related leukemia due to prior exposure to epipodophyllotoxins the latter having a short treatment--disease onset interval, absence of a
MDS
phase, a monocytic component and cytogenetic abnormalities involving the 11q23 band. The link between the existence of oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes located on the involved portion of chromosome 11 and the development of epipodophyllotoxin-related leukemia still needs to be examined. Alkylating agents--induced leukemias have a longer treatment--disease onset interval, have a prior myelodysplastic syndrome, and are most frequent myeloblastic or myelomonocytic in nature. Karyotype analysis reveals partial or complete deletion of chromosomes no. 5 or 7. This form of leukemia is highly resistant to treatment in the majority of cases. Some of the possible molecular mechanisms of
leukemogenesis
are discussed.
...
PMID:A comparative analysis of alkylating agent and epipodophyllotoxin-related leukemias. 822 Jan 58
Therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML), often presenting as myelodysplasia (t-
MDS
), has become the most serious long-term complication of cancer therapy and offers a unique opportunity to study chemical
leukemogenesis
. Seven cohorts of patients treated for six different types of primary tumor have been followed closely for leukemic complications, and 115 consecutive patients with t-
MDS
or t-AML, including 45 cases from the cohorts, have been investigated cytogenetically at our institutions during the past 16 years. In patients primarily treated with alkylating agents, the risk of t-
MDS
and t-AML increased by approximately 1% per year from 2 to at least 8 years after start of treatment. In most cases, the disease presented as t-
MDS
with loss of a whole chromosome 5 or 7, or various parts of their long arms, and the leukemias were of FAB-subtypes M1, M2, or M4. In patients treated with drugs targeting at DNA-topoisomerase II, such as etoposide, doxorubicin, 4-epidoxorubicin, or mitoxantrone combined with drugs reacting directly with DNA, such as cisplatin or alkylating agents, the risk of leukemia increased much more steeply from only one year after start of therapy. These early onset cases often presented as overt leukemia of FAB-subtypes M4 or M5 with balanced translocations to chromosome bands 11q23 and 21q22, whereas later onset cases often shared characteristics with cases observed after therapy with alkylating agents alone. Both alkylation of DNA and poisoning of DNA-topoisomerase II may result in development of t-AML with different clinical and cytogenetic characteristics. There may be a synergistic leukemogenic effect between the two types of drug, and in patients with germ cell tumors treated with etoposide, cisplatin and bleomycin, reassessment suggested the risk of leukemia to increase exponentially with increasing doses of cisplatin and etoposide.
...
PMID:Therapy-related myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukemia. Cytogenetic characteristics of 115 consecutive cases and risk in seven cohorts of patients treated intensively for malignant diseases in the Copenhagen series. 825 96
Evi-1 is a transforming gene originally identified in a common integration site of murine leukemia retrovirus and mapped in human chromosome 3q26. It is not normally expressed in either human or murine hematopoietic cells, but is overexpressed in retrovirus-induced murine myeloid leukemias as well as human myeloid leukemias with 3q26 abnormalities, and thus thought to be responsible for both human and murine
leukemogenesis
. In this study, possible involvement of the Evi-1 gene in human leukemias was evaluated by Northern blot analysis in a total of 73 patients with various types of leukemias. We found that increased expression of the Evi-1 gene was most frequently observed in patients with CML in blastic crisis. It was found in 10 of 14 (71.0%) samples from CML in blastic crisis, three of 15 (20.0%) from acute myelocytic leukemia, three of 11 (27.3%) from
MDS
-derived leukemia, and one of 11 (9.1%) from acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Among 18 patients showing increased Evi-1 expression, none of 17 informative patients showed cytogenetic abnormalities involving 3q26. In addition, Southern blot analysis revealed neither amplification nor rearrangements of the Evi-1 gene in 11 Evi-1-positive patients whose DNA samples were available. Our results suggest that increased expression of the Evi-1 gene may play an important role in development of human leukemias, especially in progression from chronic phase to blastic crisis of CML even without 3q26 abnormalities.
...
PMID:Increased Evi-1 expression is frequently observed in blastic crisis of chronic myelocytic leukemia. 865 73
It has been supposed in de novo AML that malignant transformation occurs at the level of committed progenitors. Recent data of our group and others provide evidence that in AML malignant transformation may regularly occur at the level of stem cells. These cells can be discriminated by function and specific surface molecules. CD34, a glycophosphoprotein, is a cellular surface antigen characteristically expressed by stem cells. CD34+ stem cells can be further subdivided by the expression of additional surface molecules like CD38 and CD117. In this article we present results from cytogenetic examinations of FACS-isolated stem cell subpopulations in eight patients (four AML and four
MDS
). Six of them displayed clonal karyotype abnormalities at the time of first diagnoses in the native bone marrow (5q-; 5q- and complex abnormalities; +8; inv(16) and +8; i(17q) and -21; i(21q)). We used CD117, the receptor for the stem cell factor (also KIT oncogene) as a new cellular surface marker. CD34+/CD117+/- stem cell subpopulations were examined in two patients with AML and three patients with
MDS
. We found leukemic stem cells in every type of stem cell subpopulation examined (CD34+/CD38-, CD34+/CD38+, CD34+/CD117-, CD34+/CD117+). Secondary, progression-associated chromosome abnormalities likewise were demonstrable in CD34+ cells. In three patients a mosaic of normal and abnormal metaphases was found in the highly purified stem cell subpopulations. We conclude that in AML and
MDS
stem cells are the target of leukemogenic genetic defects. CD117 as a new marker to isolate different CD34+ subpopulations was not sufficient to discriminate between normal and leukemic stem cells. Our findings have implications for autologous stem cell transplantation, high-dose chemotherapy and the pathogenetic concept of
leukemogenesis
.
...
PMID:Cytogenetic analysis of CD34+ subpopulations in AML and MDS characterized by the expression of CD38 and CD117. 918 Feb 91
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