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Query: UMLS:C0598766 (
leukemogenesis
)
4,065
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous analysis of the monoblastic cell line U937 has shown that several sublines contain a rearranged chromosome arm 11q. In order to determine the true nature of the rearrangement, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was carried out with various combinations of single copy anonymous markers, clones containing genes, a chromosome 10 paint, and an 11 centromere specific sequence. The rearrangement was deduced to be a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 10 and 11 described as t(10;11)(p13-14;q14-21). The breakpoint on chromosome 11 is telomeric to the INT2 gene and the pHS11 probe at 11q13, and centromeric to the marker D11S36 localized to 11q14.3-q22.1 and the
MLL
gene at 11q23. Similar translocations have been reported in various acute leukemias, principally of the monocytic lineage, and also in T-cell precursor acute lymphocytic leukemias. Further characterization of the genetic rearrangements in U937 may lead to the isolation of genes important in
leukemogenesis
and provide an in vitro system for their study.
...
PMID:Characterization of a t(10;11)(p13-14;q14-21) in the monoblastic cell line U937. 754 9
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
A chromosomal translocation, t(4;11)-(q21;q23), is associated with an aggressive mixed-lineage leukemia. A yeast artificial chromosome was used to clone the chromosomal breakpoint of this translocation in the RS4;11 cell line. The breakpoint sequences revealed an inverted repeat bordered by a consensus site for topoisomerase II binding and cleavage as well as chi-like elements. The der(11) chromosome encodes a fusion RNA and predicted chimeric protein between the 11q23 gene
MLL
and a 4q21 gene designated AF4. The sequence of the complete open reading frame for this fusion transcript reveals the MLL protein to have homology with DNA methyltransferase, the Drosophila trithorax gene product, and the "AT-hook" motif of high-mobility-group proteins. An alternative splice that deletes the AT-hook region of
MLL
was identified. AF4 is a serine- and proline-rich putative transcription factor with a glutamine-rich carboxyl terminus. The composition of the complete
MLL
-AF4 fusion product argues that it may act through either a gain-of-function or a dominant negative mechanism in
leukemogenesis
.
...
PMID:Acute mixed-lineage leukemia t(4;11)(q21;q23) generates an MLL-AF4 fusion product. 768 31
The t(11;19)(q23;p13.1) translocation is thought to play an important role in pathogenesis of myeloid leukemias in older patients. The
MLL
gene involved in other 11q23 abnormalities was also rearranged by this translocation. Screening of cDNA libraries of the t(11;19)(q23;p13.1)-carrying leukemic cells resulted in the isolation of several species of fusion cDNAs between the
MLL
gene and an unknown gene on 19p13.1, named MEN (myeloid eleven-nineteen translocation), which is ubiquitously expressed. Although the
MLL
gene was alternatively spliced, the fusion protein should contain an N-terminal half of the
MLL
, including AT hook motifs, that is fused to the MEN protein with a lysine-rich sequence, suggesting that the MLL/MEN fusion protein could be a chimeric transcription factor. The MLL/MEN fusion transcripts of 8.0 kb were detected in leukemic cells of two cases with the translocation. The MLL/MEN fusion was consistent in all three cases of the t(11;19)(q23;p13.1)-carrying leukemia examined by RNA-based polymerase chain reaction. These findings strongly suggest that the t(11;19)(q23;p13.1) results in the fusion formation encoding a new class of potential chimeric transcription factor that contributes to
leukemogenesis
of myeloid lineage.
...
PMID:Cloning of several species of MLL/MEN chimeric cDNAs in myeloid leukemia with t(11;19)(q23;p13.1) translocation. 771 74
Translocations involving chromosomal band 11q23 are associated with leukemias. These translocations fuse the
MLL
, a gene with sequence homology to the Drosophila trithorax, to genes from a number of other chromosomal loci. We have characterized two t(1;11)(q21;q23) translocations that fuse the
MLL
gene to a novel gene, AF1q on chromosomal band 1q21, in two infants with acute myelomonocytic leukemia (AMMOL). In one of these patients, der(11) represents an inframe fusion of the N-terminal portion of
MLL
gene to the complete AF1q open reading frame, whereas der(1) does not give rise to an open reading frame. This observation suggests that the N-terminal portion of
MLL
gene is critical for
leukemogenesis
in translocations involving band 11q23. The predicted wild-type AF-1q product is a 9-kD protein with no similarity to any other protein in the data banks. The AF1q mRNA is highly expressed in the thymus but not in peripheral lymphoid tissues. In contrast to its restricted distribution in normal hematopoietic tissue, AF1q was expressed in all leukemic cell lines tested.
...
PMID:A novel gene, AF1q, fused to MLL in t(1;11) (q21;q23), is specifically expressed in leukemic and immature hematopoietic cells. 783 68
A patient with secondary acute myelomonocytic leukemia after treatment with chronic oral etoposide (VP-16) for lung cancer is reported. The leukemic cells showed a t(9;11)(p22;q23) translocation. Southern blot analysis revealed the rearrangement of the
MLL
(ALL-1/HRX) gene at 11q23. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed a chimeric mRNA between the
MLL
gene at 11q23 and LTG9 (MLLT3/AF-9) gene at 9p22. The patient was successfully treated with a VP-16 based regimen. This case is instructive in the understanding of the
leukemogenesis
of VP-16-related leukemias.
...
PMID:Acute myelomonocytic leukemia after treatment with chronic oral etoposide: are MLL and LTG9 genes targets for etoposide? 794 64
To characterize the functions of
MLL
fusion transcripts, we cloned the gene that fuses to
MLL
in the translocation t(11;19)(q23;p13.1). This translocation is distinct from another type of 11;19 translocation with a 19p13.3 breakpoint that results in the fusion of
MLL
to the ENL gene. By PCR screening of a cDNA library prepared from a patient's leukemia cells with this translocation, we obtained a fusion transcript containing exon 7 of
MLL
and sequence of an unknown gene. The sequence of this gene was amplified and used as a probe to screen a fetal brain cDNA library. On Northern blot analysis, this cDNA detected a 4.4-kb transcript that was abundant in peripheral blood leukocytes, skeletal muscle, placenta, and testis and expressed at lower levels in spleen, thymus, heart, brain, lung, kidney, liver, and ovary. In addition, a 2.8-kb transcript was present in peripheral blood, testis, and placenta. On "zoo blots," this gene was shown to be evolutionarily conserved in 10 mammalian species as well as in chicken, frog, and fish. We have named this gene ELL (for eleven-nineteen lysine-rich leukemia gene). A highly basic, lysine-rich motif of the predicted ELL protein is homologous to similar regions of several proteins, including the DNA-binding domain of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. The characterization of the normal functions of ELL as well as its altered function when fused to
MLL
will be critical to further our understanding of the mechanisms of
leukemogenesis
.
...
PMID:Cloning of ELL, a gene that fuses to MLL in a t(11;19)(q23;p13.1) in acute myeloid leukemia. 799 93
The
MLL
gene, on human chromosome 11q23, undergoes chromosomal translocation in acute leukemias, resulting in gene fusion with AF4 (chromosome 4) and ENL (chromosome 19). We report here translocation of
MLL
with nine different chromosomes and two paracentric chromosome 11 deletions in early B cell, B- or T-cell lineage, or nonlymphocytic acute leukemias. The mRNA translocation junction from 22 t(4;11) patients, including six adult leukemias, and nine t(11;19) tumors reveals a remarkable conservation of breakpoints within
MLL
, AF4, or ENL genes, irrespective of tumor phenotype. Typically, the breakpoints are upstream of the zinc-finger region of
MLL
, and deletion of this region can accompany translocation, supporting the der(11) chromosome as the important component in
leukemogenesis
. Partial sequence of a fusion between
MLL
and the AFX1 gene from chromosome X shows the latter to be rich in Ser/Pro codons, like the ENL mRNA. These data suggest that the heterogeneous 11q23 abnormalities might cause attachment of Ser/Pro-rich segments to the NH2 terminus of
MLL
, lacking the zinc-finger region, and that translocations occur in early hematopoietic cells, before commitment to distinct lineages.
...
PMID:Acute leukemias of different lineages have similar MLL gene fusions encoding related chimeric proteins resulting from chromosomal translocation. 837 28
Recently, the
MLL
gene at 11q23 was found to be involved in a subset of leukemias with an 11q23 abnormality. In the present study, we isolated chimeric cDNAs between the
MLL
and a gene designated MLLT3 at 9p22 from a cDNA library of an IMS-M1 cell line with a t(9;11)(p22;q23) translocation, a representative karyotypic abnormality seen in acute monocytic leukemia. We also isolated a normal MLLT3 cDNA and found an open reading frame encoding at least 318 amino acids with high serine/proline content (24.8%). The chimeric mRNAs were demonstrated to be fused to
MLL
in frame, as found in t(11;19) and t(4;11) leukemias. The predicted MLLT3 protein demonstrated a significant homology to that of the MLLT1 gene at 19p13 involved in t(11;19) leukemia. The highest homology, up to 74.1%, was found in 86 amino acids of the C-terminus, suggesting that this region is of particular importance for
leukemogenesis
in t(9;11) leukemia. Northern blot analysis with the MLLT3 cDNA probe against normal tissues revealed multiple transcripts in lymphoid organs. A survey of hematopoietic cell lines demonstrated relatively stronger signals in cells belonging to megakaryocytic and erythroid lineages. As previously found in t(11;19) leukemia, heterogeneous
MLL
-MLLT3 chimeric mRNAs could be detected by the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in t(9;11) leukemia samples.
...
PMID:MLLT3 gene on 9p22 involved in t(9;11) leukemia encodes a serine/proline rich protein homologous to MLLT1 on 19p13. 841 10
Translocations involving chromosome band 11q23, found in acute lymphoid and myeloid leukemias, disrupt the
MLL
gene. This gene encodes a putative transcription factor with regions of homology to several other proteins including the zinc fingers and other domains of the Drosophila trithorax gene product, and the "AT-hook" DNA-binding motif of high mobility group proteins. We have previously demonstrated that
MLL
contains transcriptional activation and repression domains using a GAL4 fusion protein system (21). The repression domain, which is capable of repressing transcription 3-5-fold, is located centromeric to the breakpoint region of
MLL
. The activation domain, located telomeric to the breakpoint region, activated transcription from a variety of promoters including ones containing only basal promoter elements. The level of activation was very high, ranging from 10-fold to more than 300-fold, depending on the promoter and cell line used for transient transfection. In translocations involving
MLL
, the protein produced from the der(11) chromosome which contains the critical junction for
leukemogenesis
includes the AT-hook domain and the repression domain. We assessed the DNA binding capability of the
MLL
AT-hook domain using bacterially expressed and purified AT-hook protein. In a gel mobility shift assay, the
MLL
AT-hook domain could bind cruciform DNA, recognizing structure rather than sequence of the target DNA. This binding could be specifically competed with Hoechst 33258 dye and with distamycin. In a nitrocellulose protein-DNA binding assay, the
MLL
AT-hook domain could bind to AT-rich SARs, but not to non-SAR DNA fragments. The role that the AT-hook binding to DNA may play in vivo is unclear, but it is likely that DNA binding could affect downstream gene regulation. The AT-hook domain retained on the der(11) would potentially recognize a different DNA target than the one normally recognized by the intact MLL protein. Furthermore, loss of an activation domain while retaining a repression domain on the der(11) chromosome could alter the expression of various downstream target genes, suggesting potential mechanisms of action for
MLL
in leukemia.
...
PMID:The mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) protein involved in 11q23 translocations contains a domain that binds cruciform DNA and scaffold attachment region (SAR) DNA. 858 57
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