Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (chronic myeloid leukemia)
18,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) is found in both chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The Ph translocation, t(9;22)(q34;q11), can disrupt the BCR gene on chromosome 22 in one to two areas called the major (Mbcr1) and minor (mbcr1) breakpoint cluster regions. In CML the breakpoint has been mapped almost exclusively to Mbcr1, whereas in Ph positive ALL both Mbcr1 and the upstream mbcr1 breakpoints have been described. In this communication we describe an unusual patient with typical chronic phase Ph positive CML and evidence of the uncharacteristic mbcr1 breakpoint, predicting expression of the ALL-type p190 fusion protein. Fluorescence in situ hybridization demonstrated BCR gene rearrangement, the reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction detected the BCR-ABL fusion mRNA characteristic of the mbcr1 breakpoint, and failed to detect BCR-ABL mRNA characteristic of the Mbcr1 breakpoint. Southern blot analysis revealed no rearrangement in Mbcr1, and direct sequencing of the PCR product confirmed it to be the ALL-type mbcr1 fusion mRNA with the first exon of the BCR gene fused to ABL exon a2. This case differs from the previously reported cases of "p190" CML in that the patient presented without abnormal hematopoietic features other than those found in typical CML and provides further evidence that the p190 mRNA is not sufficient to cause an acute rather than chronic leukemia.
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PMID:Unusual expression of mRNA typical of Philadelphia positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia detected in chronic myeloid leukemia. 875 76

BCR-ABL is a chimaeric oncogene generated by translocation of sequences from the c-ABL protein-tyrosine kinase gene on chromosome 9 into the BCR gene on chromosome 22. Alternative chimeric proteins, p210(BCR-ABL) and p190(BCR-ABL), are produced that are characteristic of chronic myelogenous leukemia and acute lymphoblastic leukemia, respectively. Their role in the aetiology of human leukemia remains to be defined. We have previously shown that the tumorigenic effect of BCR-ABL oncogenes is mediated by Bcl-2. In addition to Bcl-2, is a protein essential for transformation by BCR-ABL. However, it is not known how Bcl-2 and Ras fit together in cell transformation by BCR-ABL. The data presented here establish that Bcl-2 is a downstream target gene of the Ras signalling pathway in cells transformed by BCR-ABL, and that constitutive Ras activation results in constitutive expression of the gene. Conversely, a truncated form of the BCR-ABL, which lacks a critical BCR region required for activation of the Ras signalling pathway, failed to induce Bcl-2 expression. These results indicate that BCR-ABL prevents apoptosis by inducing Bcl-2 through a signalling pathway involving Ras and links constitutive Ras activation and Bcl-2 gene regulation. Hence, these results further imply that Ras is involved in both mitogenic signals and survival signals.
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PMID:Regulation of Bcl-2 gene expression by BCR-ABL is mediated by Ras. 909 20

In Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1)-positive human leukemia, the c-Abl tyrosine kinase is activated by fusion to sequences encoded by the breakpoint cluster region (bcr) gene. Two major types of Bcr-Abl fusion proteins have been found in human leukemia. Fusion of the N-terminal 426 amino acids of Bcr generates p190(Bcr-Abl) which is mostly found in acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), whereas fusion of the N-terminal 902 or 927 amino acids of Bcr generates p210(Bcr-Abl) mostly found with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Previous studies have demonstrated that both the Bcr and the Abl functional domains contribute to the oncogenic activity of Bcr-Abl proteins. Present in both p190 and p210 is the N-terminal coiled-coil of Bcr (aa 1-63), which is shown here to be functionally replaceable with the leucine zipper of the yeast transcription factor GCN4. The ZIP-Bcr-Abl protein transforms Rat-1/myc cells, is autophosphorylated on tyrosine and localized predominantly to actin filaments. Thus, formation of homo-oligomers through either Bcr or GCN4 coiled-coil can activate the tyrosine kinase and F-actin binding functions of Abl. We also found that a Bcr-Abl fusion containing only Bcr amino acids (1-191) can efficiently transform Rat-1/myc cells. Fusion of additional Bcr sequences (aa 192-923) did not affect the transformation of Rat-1/myc cells but progressively reduced the disruptive effect on the actin cytoskeleton. In particular, the Dbl homology domain present in p210(Bcr-Abl) but not in p190(Bcr-Abl) contributes to the stabilization of actin fibers. The modulatory effect of Bcr sequences on actin structure may underlie the apparent pathogenic variations between the different Bcr-Abl fusion proteins.
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PMID:Effect of Bcr sequences on the cellular function of the Bcr-Abl oncoprotein. 934 95

The bcr-abl oncogene is the molecular counterpart of the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph), which is detected in > 95% of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and 20-30% of adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Leukemic cells from patients with CML express the p210 form of the bcr-abl oncogene, whereas in adult Ph+ ALL approximately 50% of cases express the p190 form of the bcr-abl oncogene, and the other 50% express the same p210 gene as is found in CML. In this study, we have designed hairpin ribozymes (RZs) specific for the p190 form of the bcr-abl oncogene to inhibit the growth of a p190 Ph+ ALL cell line, Sup-B15. The RZs cleave p190 RNA substrate in a cell-free in vitro assay. In the presence of the liposome, DMRIE-C, the RZs are protected from serum mediated catalysis in vitro. Anti-p190 RZs transfected with DMRIE-C as the vector into K562 cells, which express the p210 bcr-abl oncogene, are stable intracellularly for up to 96 hours. Up to 33% of the DMRIE-C and RZ mixtures are taken up by Sup-B15 cells cultured in suspension. Expression of the p190 bcr-abl protein product is specifically inhibited as demonstrated by Western blot analysis. Cell growth of the Sup-B15 cells is completely inhibited by anti-p190 RZs over four days in culture. Anti-p210 RZs have no significant effect on bcr-abl protein expression or cell growth by Sup-B15 cells. RZs may have a role in purging stem cell populations collected from patients with Ph+ ALL in the context of autologous bone marrow transplantation.
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PMID:Ribozyme-mediated inhibition of a Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell line expressing the p190 bcr-abl oncogene. 936 Jul 79

The BCR-ABL hybrid gene, the main product of the t(9;22)(q34;q11) translocation, is found in the leukaemic clone of at least 95% of CML patients. The fusion protein encoded by BCR-ABL varies in size, depending on the breakpoint in the BCR gene. Three breakpoint cluster regions have been characterized to date: major (M-bcr), minor (m-bcr) and micro (mu-bcr). The overwhelming majority of CML patients have a p210 BCR-ABL gene (M-bcr), whose mRNA transcripts have a b3a2 and/or a b2a2 junction. There is apparently no significant difference between patients with a 5' or a 3' M-bcr breakpoint, except maybe for a slight predominance of b3a2-expressing cases among those with increased platelet counts (ET-like syndrome). The smallest of the fusion proteins, p190BCR-ABL, (m-bcr breakpoint) is principally associated with Ph-positive ALL. Rare cases of CML are due to a p190-type of BCR-ABL gene and, in these, the disease tends to have a prominent monocytic component, resembling CMML. CML resulting from a p230 BCR-ABL gene (mu-bcr breakpoint) is also rare, and has been associated with the CNL variant and/or with marked thrombocytosis. Exceptional CML cases have been described with BCR breakpoints outside the three defined cluster regions, or with unusual breakpoints in ABL resulting in BCR-ABL transcripts with b2a3 or b3a3 junctions, or with aberrant fusion transcripts containing variable lengths of intronic sequence inserts. The reciprocal ABL-BCR gene found in the derivative 9q+ chromosome of the t(9;22) is transcriptionally active in nearly two-thirds of CML patients but has not been shown so far to have a functional role in CML. 'Ph-negative CML' comprises cases of typical CML in whom the BCR-ABL gene can be detected by molecular methods and others who are genuinely BCR-ABL negative and usually have an atypical disease phenotype.
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PMID:BCR-ABL gene variants. 937 60

Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a malignant disease of the human hematopoietic stem cell caused by the BCR/ABL gene rearrangement. The only curative therapy is allogeneic transplantation. Although autologous transplants may prolong survival, most patients relapse because of disease persisting in the host and in the graft. Continued administration of chemotherapy after transplant could reduce the incidence of relapse provided that the autograft can be protected by transfer of a drug-resistance gene. However, CML autografts will almost certainly contain malignant stem cells that will also be rendered drug-resistant. The presence of the BCR/ABL oncoprotein is necessary and sufficient for malignant transformation seen in CML. We thus hypothesized that transfer of a vector that combines a drug-resistance gene with anti-BCR/ABL antisense (AS) sequences may allow for posttransplant chemotherapy to decrease persistent disease while rendering inadvertently transduced CML stem and progenitor cells functionally normal. We constructed a retroviral vector, LasBD, that combines the methotrexate (MTX)-resistant tyrosine-22 dihydrofolate-reductase (tyr22-DHFR) gene and AS sequences directed at the b3a2 BCR/ABL breakpoint. b3a2 BCR/ABL containing 32D and MO7e cells were transduced with LasBD and selected in MTX for 14 days. Expression of the AS sequences reduced BCR/ABL mRNA and p210(BCR/ABL) protein levels by 6- to 10-fold in most cells. This subsequently led to the restoration of normal function of BCR/ABL cDNA+ cells: they grew significantly slower in the presence of interleukin-3 (IL-3); they underwent apoptotic cell death when cultured without IL-3; and they had restored expression and function of adhesion receptors. These effects were specific, because LasBD-containing AS sequences directed at the b3a2 BCR/ABL breakpoint did not affect p190(BCR/ABL)-containing cells. LasBD also rendered 20% to 30% of primary Ph- and Ph+ CD34(+) cells MTX-resistant and decreased BCR/ABL mRNA levels in MTX resistant Ph+ CD34(+) cells by 10-fold. Expression of the MTX-resistant DHFR gene and the AS sequences has been stable for at least 1 year in vitro and for more than 70 days in vivo. Finally, LasBD decreased tumorigenicity of 32DBCR/ABL cells in vivo by 3 to 4 logs. In conclusion, the tyr22-DHFR gene in the LasBD vector can protect normal hematopoietic cells from MTX-mediated toxicity, whereas the AS sequences in LasBD can suppress expression of the BCR/ABL gene and restore normal function of BCR/ABL cDNA-containing cells. The LasBD vector may therefore prove to be an extremely useful adjunct in autologous transplantation for CML.
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PMID:Gene therapy for chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML): a retroviral vector that renders hematopoietic progenitors methotrexate-resistant and CML progenitors functionally normal and nontumorigenic in vivo. 938 83

We present here a rare case of Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia having p190 BCR/ABL with a malignant clinical picture of extramedullary blast crisis at onset, followed by rapid evolution to bone-marrow blast crisis. The patient was a 44-year-old woman presenting with leukocytosis and multiple lymph-node swelling in the neck. Lymph-node biopsy revealed a myeloperoxidase-positive blastoma with cell-surface markers of myeloid and T-lymphoid lineages. Fluorescence in situ hybridization and the reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction detected a minor BCR breakpoint but failed to detect a major BCR breakpoint. By single-strand conformation polymorphism and direct sequencing, no alteration in the TP53 gene was found, and no additional chromosomal abnormalities other than Ph were identified. The present case suggests that p190 BCR/ABL is associated with the aggressive course of the disease.
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PMID:Extramedullary presentation of chronic myelogenous leukemia with p190 BCR/ABL transcripts. 953 Mar 44

Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) is considered a clonal disease restricted to the lymphoid compartment. The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) is found in a subset of ALL with poor prognosis. Here we present the largest series of Ph+ ALL analyzed for involvement of the myeloid compartment. For the first time at a single cell level the presence of Ph in lineages other than lymphoid is demonstrated. Granulocytes from nine patients diagnosed with BCR-ABL + ALL (eight Ph+, one Ph-) were purified using two layer density gradient separation. They were further identified by the morphology of DAPI-stained nuclei and studied for the presence of the Ph by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using a BCR-ABL dual-color probe. Ph was demonstrated in 30 to 93% of granulocytes in all patients. FISH identified major and minor BCR gene breakpoints (M-bcr and m-bcr). In one patient, with CD19+/34+/33-/2-/3-/7-/10- lymphoblasts, involvement of B cells (CD19+), T cells (CD3+), myeloid (CD13+), erythroid (glycophorin A+) cells was found by FISH following fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). The diagnosis of ALL as opposed to lymphoblastic transformation of CML was established based on clinical and laboratory data including Western blot results demonstrating the presence of p190/m-bcr in five of the nine cases studied. Results suggest that Ph+ ALL originates from a pluripotent stem cell.
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PMID:Multilineage involvement of Philadelphia chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 959 63

The number of genetic lesions necessary to generate leukemia in humans is unknown, but it is possible that certain specific abnormalities, eg, fusion genes, known to be associated with acute and chronic leukemia are produced relatively frequently in human cells but require other events to occur before the leukemia becomes manifest. We investigated this possibility by studying peripheral blood leukocytes from normal individuals and various hematopoietic cell lines for the presence and expression of the p210 and the p190 types of the BCR-ABL gene associated with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia. We used two-step reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assays in which batches of 10(8) cells per sample were tested in 40 replicate reactions. We estimate that this assay is 1.5 logs more sensitive than the two-step RT-PCR assays that we use routinely to assess minimal residual disease. BCR-ABL fusion gene transcripts of various configurations were found in circulating leukocytes from 12 of the 16 healthy adults analyzed. Transcripts with an e1a2 junction (p190 BCR-ABL) were present in 11 and p210-type transcripts with b2a2 and/or b3a2 junctions were detected in 4 individuals. The same RT-PCR assays in non-CML cell lines showed the presence of classical or aberrant p210-type mRNA in 3 of 7 lines and of p190-type transcripts in all 7 lines of hematopoietic origin (HL60, KG1, U937, Kasumi, Jurkat, JVM13, and JVM25), whereas the NIH3T3 murine fibroblast line was reproducibly negative for these fusion genes. These findings confirm and extend previous reports on the detection of leukemia-associated genes in normal leukocytes and suggest that certain fusion genes are generated relatively frequently in hematopoietic cells, but only infrequently do the cells acquire the additional changes necessary to produce leukemia in humans. Although there is only a small probability that such innocent BCR-ABL-carrying leukocytes are detected by conventional RT-PCR assays, they may be the source of some sporadically positive tests in leukemia patients in long-term remission.
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PMID:The presence of typical and atypical BCR-ABL fusion genes in leukocytes of normal individuals: biologic significance and implications for the assessment of minimal residual disease. 978 74

An immunosuppressive but not myeloablative regimen followed by HLA-matched donor mobilized haemopoietic stem cell transplantation was employed in two high-risk patients. The first patient had refractory anaemia with excess blasts (RAEB) and cytogenetic evidence of translocation 1;3(p36;q21). The second patient had Philadelphia-negative but p190 BCR-ABL chimaeric gene positive chronic myelogenous leukaemia in accelerated phase (AP-CML). The conditioning regimen consisted of fludarabine (30 mg/m2/d, days 1-3) with cyclophosphamide (300 mg/m2/d, days 1-3). Cyclosporine and methotrexate were employed for acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) prophylaxis. In both cases the engraftment of donor cells was demonstrated by cytogenetics and short tandem repeat polymorphisms via PCR. Both patients are alive with normal cytogenetic (RAEB) and molecular (AP-CML) remissions, 100 and 150 d after allografting, respectively. In particular, in the AP-CML patient, the BCR-ABL became undetectable and the BCR-ABL/ABL ratio was <0.0001.
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PMID:Evidence of cytogenetic and molecular remission by allogeneic cells after immunosuppressive therapy alone. 982 37


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