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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
HoxB8 was the first
homeobox gene
identified as a cause of
leukemia
. In murine WEHI3B acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells, proviral integration leads to the expression of both HoxB8 and Interleukin (IL-3). Enforced expression of HoxB8 blocks differentiation of factor-dependent myeloid progenitors, while IL-3 co-expression induces autocrine proliferation and overt leukemogenicity. Previously, we demonstrated that HoxB8 binds DNA cooperatively with members of the Pbx family of transcription factors, and that HoxB8 makes contact with the Pbx homeodomain through a hexameric sequence designated the Pbx-interaction motif (PIM). E2a-Pbx1, an oncogenic derivative of Pbx1, both retains its ability to heterodimerize with Hox proteins and arrest myeloid differentiation. This observation prompts the question of whether E2a-Pbx1 and Hox oncoproteins use endogenous Hox and Pbx proteins, respectively, to target a common set of cellular genes. Here, we use four different models of neutrophil and macrophage differentiation to determine whether HoxB8 needs to bind DNA or Pbx cofactors in order to arrest myeloid differentiation. The ability of HoxB8 to bind DNA or to bind Pbx was essential (1) to block differentiation of factor-dependent myeloid progenitors from primary marrow; (2) to block IL-6-induced monocytic differentiation of M1-AML cells; and (3) to block granulocytic differentiation of GM-CSF-dependent ECoM-G cells. However, while DNA-binding was required, the HoxB8 Pbx-interaction motif was unnecessary for preventing macrophage differentiation of ECoM-M cells. We conclude that HoxB8 prevents differentiation by directly influencing cellular gene expression, and that the genetic context within a cell dictates whether the effect of HoxB8 is dependent on a physical interaction with Pbx proteins.
...
PMID:HoxB8 requires its Pbx-interaction motif to block differentiation of primary myeloid progenitors and of most cell line models of myeloid differentiation. 1157 41
FISH identified a cryptic t(5;14)(q35;q32) in T acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), whereas it was not observed in B ALL samples. This translocation is present in five out of 23 (22%) children and adolescents with T ALL tested. RanBP17, a gene coding for a member of the importin beta protein family, and Hox11Like2, an orphan
homeobox gene
were mapped close to the chromosome 5 breakpoints and CTIP2, which is highly expressed during normal T cell differentiation, was localized in the vicinity of the chromosome 14 breakpoints. The Hox11L2 gene was found to be transcriptionally activated as a result of the translocation, probably under the influence of CTIP2 transcriptional regulation elements. These data establish the t(5;14)(q35;q32) as a major abnormality, and Hox11 family member activation as an important pathway in T ALL leukemogenesis.
Leukemia
2001 Oct
PMID:A new recurrent and specific cryptic translocation, t(5;14)(q35;q32), is associated with expression of the Hox11L2 gene in T acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1158 5
Homeobox genes encode transcription factors known to be important morphogenic regulators during embryonic development. An increasing body of work implies a role for homeobox genes in both hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis. In the present study we have analyzed the role of the
homeobox gene
, HOXB6, in the program of differentiation of the myeloid cell lines, NB4 and HL60. HOXB6 expression is transiently induced during normal granulocytopoiesis and monocytopoiesis, with an initial induction during the early phases of differentiation, followed by a blockade of expression at early maturation. The enforced expression of HOXB6 in promyelocytic NB4 cells or in myeloblastic HL60 cells elicited inhibition of the granulocytic or monocytic maturation, respectively. Furthermore, HOXB6 was frequently expressed (18 out of 49 cases) in AMLs lacking major translocations while it was expressed at very low frequency (two out of 47 cases) in AMLs characterized by PML/RAR-alpha, AML-1/ETO, CBFbeta/MYH11 fusion and rearrangements of the MLL gene at 11q23. According to these observations, we suggest that a regulated pattern of HOXB6 expression is required for normal granulopoiesis and monocytopoiesis. Abnormalities of the HOXB6 expression may contribute to the development of the leukemic phenotype.
Leukemia
2002 Jul
PMID:Expression pattern of HOXB6 homeobox gene in myelomonocytic differentiation and acute myeloid leukemia. 1209 53
The t(5;14)(q33-34;q11) translocation constitutes a recurrent rearrangement in acute lymphoblastic leukemia involving the T cell receptor (TCR) delta locus on chromosome 14. Breakpoint sequences of the derivative chromosome 5 were isolated by application of a ligation-mediated PCR technique using TCR delta-specific primers to amplify genomic DNA from the leukemic cells of a patient with t(5;14). Through exon trap analysis, we identified various putative exons of the chromosome 5 target gene of the translocation; compilation of sequence information of trapped exons and available expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from the GenBank database allowed us to assemble 1.2 kb of the cDNA. Full-length cDNAs were isolated from a human testis cDNA library and sequence analysis predicted a putative Ran binding protein, a novel member of the importin-beta superfamily of nuclear transport receptors, called RanBP17. The t(5;14) breakpoint maps to the 3' coding region of the gene. The breakpoint of a second t(5;14) positive patient was mapped about 8 kb downstream of the most 3' RanBP17 exon and 2 kb upstream of the first exon of the orphan
homeobox gene
, Hox11L2. In both cases TCR delta enhancer sequences are juxtaposed downstream of the truncated or intact RanBP17 gene, respectively on the derivative chromosome.
Leukemia
2002 Nov
PMID:Disruption of the RanBP17/Hox11L2 region by recombination with the TCRdelta locus in acute lymphoblastic leukemias with t(5;14)(q34;q11). 1239 63
The orphan
homeobox gene
HOX11L2 was previously found to be transcriptionally activated as a result of the t(5;14)(q35;q32) translocation in three T-ALL cases. We now tested by RT-PCR Hox11L2 expression in 23 consecutive cases of T-ALL (15 children aged 0.8-14 years, eight adults aged 17-55 years) and as control 13 B-ALL patients from a single institution. Hox11L2 expression was undetectable in all patients with B-ALL, nor in adults with T-ALL. Nine children (60% of the cases), all boys, expressed Hox11L2. Blast cells from most of the latter patients carried surface CD1a, CD10 and not CD34 antigens, in contrast to the other children. FISH, M-FISH and IPM-FISH analysis failed to detect a t(5;14)(q35;q32) in one of them, which suggests a possible distinct genetic mechanism in Hox11L2 expression induction. Hence, Hox11L2 expression seems to be the most frequent abnormality in childhood T-ALL to date, comparable to the t(12;21) in child B-ALL.
Leukemia
2002 Dec
PMID:High incidence of Hox11L2 expression in children with T-ALL. 1245 47
The haematopoietic
homeobox gene
Hex (also called Prh) is expressed in myeloid cells and B cells but not T cells. To investigate whether Hex levels might play a role in myeloid versus T-cell development, two types of transgenic mouse lines were constructed, each with ectopic expression of Hex in T cells (CD11a/Hex and Lck/Hex). Both these types of transgenic mouse had the same defects in T-cell maturation, indicating that proper T-cell development may be dependent not just on the up-regulation of lymphoid-specific transcriptional regulators but also on the co-ordinated down-regulation of myeloid-specific transcriptional regulators such as Hex. In addition, Hex over-expression significantly increased myeloid progenitor cycling, which may explain its role in retrovirally induced murine
leukaemia
.
...
PMID:Down-regulation of the myeloid homeobox protein Hex is essential for normal T-cell development. 1246 Jan 89
T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) presents a difficult medical problem. T-ALL's clinical features and the biological properties of the
leukemia
cells are not predictive of prognosis, and thus have not been useful for risk-specific adjustments in therapeutic intensity. Microarray gene expression analyses of T-cell leukemic lymphoblasts have not only improved our understanding of the biological heterogeneity of this disease but have revealed clinically relevant molecular subtypes. Five different multistep molecular pathways have been identified that lead to T-ALL, involving activation of different T-ALL oncogenes: (1) HOX11, (2) HOX11L2, (3) TAL1 plus LMO1/2, (4) LYL1 plus LMO2, and (5) MLL-ENL. Gene expression studies indicate activation of a subset of these genes-HOX11, TAL1, LYL1, LMO1, and LMO2-in a much larger fraction of T-ALL cases than those harboring activating chromosomal translocations. In many such cases, the abnormal expression of one or more of these oncogenes is biallelic, implicating upstream regulatory mechanisms. Among these molecular subtypes, overexpression of the HOX11 orphan
homeobox gene
occurs in approximately 5% to 10% of childhood and 30% of adult T-ALL cases. Patients with HOX11-positive lymphoblasts have an excellent prognosis when treated with modern combination chemotherapy, while cases at high risk of early failure are included largely in the TAL1- and LYL1-positive groups. Supervised learning approaches applied to microarray data have identified a group of genes whose expression is able to distinguish high-risk cases. Further analyses of gene expression signatures of T-ALL lymphoblasts are especially needed for patients treated on modern combination chemotherapy trials to clearly distinguish the 10% to 15% of patients who fail induction or relapse in the first year of treatment. These high-risk patients would be ideal candidates for more intensive therapies in first remission, such as myeloablative regimens with stem cell rescue. Based on the rapid pace of research in T-ALL, made possible in large part through microarray technology, deep analysis of molecular pathways should lead to new and much more specific targeted therapies.
...
PMID:Gene expression profiling in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1458 78
Creation of fusion genes by balanced chromosomal translocations is one of the hallmarks of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and is considered one of the key leukemogenic events in this disease. In t(12;13)(p13;q12) AML, ectopic expression of the
homeobox gene
CDX2 was detected in addition to expression of the ETV6-CDX2 fusion gene, generated by the chromosomal translocation. Here we show in a murine model of t(12;13)(p13;q12) AML that myeloid leukemogenesis is induced by the ectopic expression of CDX2 and not by the ETV6-CDX2 chimeric gene. Mice transplanted with bone marrow cells retrovirally engineered to express Cdx2 rapidly succumbed to fatal and transplantable AML. The transforming capacity of Cdx2 depended on an intact homeodomain and the N-terminal transactivation domain. Transplantation of bone marrow cells expressing ETV6-CDX2 failed to induce
leukemia
. Furthermore, coexpression of ETV6-CDX2 and Cdx2 in bone marrow cells did not accelerate the course of disease in transplanted mice compared to Cdx2 alone. These data demonstrate that activation of a protooncogene by a balanced chromosomal translocation can be the pivotal leukemogenic event in AML, characterized by the expression of a
leukemia
-specific fusion gene. Furthermore, these findings link protooncogene activation to myeloid leukemogenesis, an oncogenic mechanism so far associated mainly with lymphoid leukemias and lymphomas.
...
PMID:Ectopic expression of the homeobox gene Cdx2 is the transforming event in a mouse model of t(12;13)(p13;q12) acute myeloid leukemia. 1471 72
Chromosomal aberrations occur with great frequency and some specificity in
leukemia
and other hematologic malignancies. The most common outcome of these rearrangements is the formation of a fusion gene, comprising portions of 2 genes normally present in the cell. These fusion proteins are presumed to be oncogenic; in many cases, animal models have proven them to be oncogenic. One of the most promiscuous fusion partner genes is the newly identified NUP98 gene, located on chromosome 11p15.5, which to date has been observed fused to 15 different fusion partners. NUP98 encodes a 98 kD protein that is an important component of the nuclear pore complex, which mediates nucleo-cytoplasmic transport of protein and RNA. The fusion partners of NUP98 form 2 distinct groups: homeobox genes and non-homeobox genes. All NUP98 fusions join the N-terminal GLFG repeats of NUP98 to the C-terminal portion of the partner gene, which, in the case of the
homeobox gene
partners, includes the homeodomain. Clinical findings are reviewed here, along with the findings of several in vivo and in vitro models have been employed to investigate the mechanisms by which NUP98 fusion genes contribute to the pathogenesis of
leukemia
.
...
PMID:The role of NUP98 gene fusions in hematologic malignancy. 1535 31
HOX genes are evolutionarily highly conserved. The HOX proteins which they encode are master regulators of embryonic development and continue to be expressed throughout postnatal life. The 39 human HOX genes are located in four clusters (A-D) on different chromosomes at 7p15, 17q21 [corrected] 12q13, and 2q31 respectively and are assumed to have arisen by duplication and divergence from a primordial
homeobox gene
. Disorders of limb formation, such as hand-foot-genital syndrome, have been traced to mutations in HOXA13 and HOXD13. Evolutionary conservation provides unlimited scope for experimental investigation of the functional control of the Hox gene network which is providing important insights into human disease. Chromosomal translocations involving the MLL gene, the human homologue of the Drosophila gene trithorax, create fusion genes which exhibit gain of function and are associated with aggressive leukaemias in both adults and children. To date 39 partner genes for MLL have been cloned from patients with
leukaemia
. Models based on specific translocations of MLL and individual HOX genes are now the subject of intense research aimed at understanding the molecular programs involved, and ultimately the design of chemotherapeutic agents for
leukaemia
. Investigation of the role of HOX genes in cancer has led to the concept that oncology may recapitulate ontology, a challenging postulate for experimentalists in view of the functional redundancy implicit in the HOX gene network.
...
PMID:HOX genes: seductive science, mysterious mechanisms. 1645 1
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