Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:A9QXG9 (bcl-2)
7,497 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The t(14;18) chromosomal translocation that results in the juxtaposition of the bcl-2 proto-oncogene with the heavy chain JH locus is a common cytogenetic abnormality in human lymphoma. In particular, it is seen in about 85% of follicular lymphoma (FL) and up to one-third of diffuse lymphomas (DL). The chromosome 18 breakpoints have been shown to cluster into two regions. The major breakpoint region (mbr) within the 3' untranslated region of the bcl-2 proto-oncogene accounts for approximately 60% of the cases and the minor cluster region (mcr) 30 kb 3' of bcl-2 accounts for approximately 25% of the breakpoints. Because of variability in the position of the breakpoint, detection of the t(14;18) by Southern blot analysis provides an important clonal marker for the tumor. However, conventional electrophoresis (CE) fails to detect the translocation in 15% to 25% of cases. We have applied pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) to the detection of the t(14;18) in a series of lymphoma prospectively analyzed by CE, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and cytogenetic analysis. PFGE readily detected t(14;18) rearrangements as indicated by comigration of bands detected with probes for the mbr region (chromosome 18) and the JH locus (chromosome 14). In a series of 40 patients with FL, this method proved to be the most comprehensive for detection of the translocation compared with standard methods; in fact, in one case only PFGE was able to detect the chromosomal rearrangement. Ten percent of the FL cases were negative by all methods tested. In a separate analysis of matched tissue specimens from cases of tumor progression of FL to diffuse lymphoma, PFGE detected a common t(14;18) rearrangement confirming a clonal origin in seven of seven cases, whereas CE detected a rearrangement in only three of seven cases. Overall, PFGE was able to detect a translocation in 8 of 12 cases that were negative by CE and four of eight negative by cytogenetic analysis. In conclusion, PFGE analysis is more comprehensive than CE, PCR, and cytogenetic analysis for the detection of the t(14;18) breakpoint in tissue biopsies of malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:Enhanced detection of the t(14;18) translocation in malignant lymphoma using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. 188 22

Breakpoints of a lymphoma case with bcl-2 gene rearrangement that did not show comigration of immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy chain joining (JH) fragment were cloned. Sequence analysis revealed that the translocation broke the 3' side of the Ig heavy chain diversity (DH) segment at the heptamer recombination signal and each end was ligated to the bcl-2 locus. Since Southern blot demonstrated that both alleles of JH were rearranged, this translocation was suggested to have occurred at the step of VH-DH, or DH-DHJH recombination, one step later than that of DH-JH recombination where the common pattern of bcl-2 rearrangement generally occurs. Cases that showed comigration with JH fragment were also studied by polymerase chain reaction with 5' bcl-2 oligomer and 3' JH consensus anti-sense oligomer since it has been demonstrated that bcl-2 translocation at the major breakpoint clustering region (mbr) in American cases clusters within an about 150 bp region in the mbr. The results demonstrated that four out of five cases studied were amplified, indicating that the same clustering mechanism exists for Japanese cases. The present study, together with our previous report on Ig kappa-bcl-2, indicated that bcl-2 translocation in Japanese B cell lymphomas might occur at a later stage of B cell development, as compared with that in American cases. Less involvement of bcl-2 in Japanese B cell lymphoma may also be in part explainable by low susceptibility to bcl-2 rearrangement at the step of DH-JH recombination.
...
PMID:bcl-2 translocation in Japanese B cell lymphoma: novel bcl-2 translocation with immunoglobulin heavy chain diversity segment. 190 Feb 70

Chromosomal translocations involving the heavy chain immunoglobulin locus on chromosome 14 and a region on chromosome 18 encoding the bcl-2 gene [t(14;18)] are a characteristic and prevalent chromosomal abnormality in nodal malignant lymphoma, particularly follicular lymphoma. Using the polymerase chain reaction on routinely processed tissue, t(14;18) has been demonstrated in 22% of primary intestinal lymphomas, i.e. in two of nine cases of malignant lymphomatous polyposis, in four of 19 cases of polymorphic B-cell lymphoma and in one of four high-grade unclassified tumours. The findings in this study contradict those of other studies which have shown no such translocation in primary gastric and small intestinal lymphoma. The presence of t(14;18) indicates heterogeneity of molecular abnormalities within histopathologically homogeneous tumours and suggests that caution should be employed in using molecular cytogenetic data to support theories of tumour histogenesis. The low prevalence of this translocation in intestinal lymphoma makes the use of such a methodology as a primary diagnostic aid doubtful, although the technique may help to distinguish primary and secondary lymphoma and could also be used to demonstrate secondary spread.
...
PMID:14;18 translocation in primary intestinal lymphoma: detection by polymerase chain reaction in routinely processed tissue. 190 95

Centrocytic lymphoma is a B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) composed of lymphocytes resembling cleaved follicular center cells (centrocytes). Previous studies have suggested an association between t(11;14) chromosomal translocations and bcl-1 rearrangement in centrocytic and related intermediate lymphocytic lymphomas. To further characterize the association between bcl-1 and centrocytic lymphoma, Southern blot analysis was performed on samples from 23 patients using four separate bcl-1 breakpoint probes spanning 63 kb of the chromosome 11 bcl-1 locus. Rearrangements were identified in six patients with the major translocation cluster (MTC) probe and in another six with probe p94PS, located about 24 kb 5' of MTC. Eleven of these 12 cases showed comigration of rearranged bcl-1 and Ig heavy chain-joining genes, consistent with the t(11;14) chromosomal translocation. No rearrangements were observed with the bcl-1 locus probes p210 or p11EH located 5' of p94PS, nor with bcl-2 or c-myc oncogene probes. No bcl-1 rearrangements were identified in B-cell follicular NHL (15), small noncleaved cell (Burkitt's and non-Burkitt's) NHL (8), T-cell NHL (4), multiple myeloma (14), and pre-B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (9). One of 23 B-cell NHL of large cell type and one of 19 chronic lymphocytic leukemias or small lymphocytic NHL had MTC rearrangement. Thus, bcl-1 rearrangement occurred at MTC or p94PS in 12 of 23 centrocytic lymphomas (52%), confirming a nonrandom association and suggesting a pathogenetic role for the bcl-1 locus in this immunohistologic subtype of NHL.
...
PMID:Rearrangement of the chromosome 11 bcl-1 locus in centrocytic lymphoma: analysis with multiple breakpoint probes. 207 85

The pattern of malignant lymphomas in the Hong Kong Chinese population is characterized by a low incidence of Hodgkin's disease and follicular lymphomas. The authors studied the immunoglobulin (Ig), T-cell receptor (TCR), and bcl-2 gene rearrangement in 62 cases of malignant lymphoma in this population by Southern blot hybridization. Two cases of Hodgkin's disease showed no rearrangement of the Ig and TCR genes. All 42 cases of B-cell lymphoma had Ig heavy chain (JH) rearrangement with or without additional rearrangement of the light chains (C kappa and C lambda). One case of diffuse B-cell lymphoma had additional T-cell receptor beta-chain (C beta) rearrangement. Sixteen of 18 cases of T-cell lymphoma had C beta rearrangement, and one case of T-lymphoblastic lymphoma had additional JH rearrangement. Two of eight (25%) cases of follicular lymphoma but only one of the 34 (2.9%) cases of diffuse B-cell lymphoma had bcl-2 rearrangement that was detected by pFL-1 probe. None of the 62 cases showed bcl-2 rearrangement using the pFL-2 probe. In conclusion, the Ig and TCR gene rearrangement pattern of the lymphomas found in Hong Kong correlates well with the T-cell and B-cell lineage, which is similar to reports in the white population. However, the incidence of bcl-2 gene rearrangement in follicular B-cell lymphoma is lower than that reported in the US but comparable with that in Japan.
...
PMID:Rearrangement of immunoglobulin, T-cell receptor, and bcl-2 genes in malignant lymphomas in Hong Kong. 220 29

We report a case of untreated non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with histologic progression over 1 yr from a low-grade, small cleaved follicular center cell lymphoma to a high-grade, small noncleaved follicular center cell lymphoma. Both lymphomas had identical immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy-chain joining gene (JH), kappa light-chain joining gene, and bcl-2 gene rearrangements, indicating the clonal identity of the two tumors. The Ig heavy chain locus on one chromosome 14 was involved in an initial t(14; 18) translocation as shown by comigrating JH and bcl-2 rearrangements. However, the oncogene c-myc was in the germline configuration in the initial lymphoma but had one allele rearranged near the 3' end of exon I in the high-grade tumor; DNA sequence analysis was consistent with a chromosomal breakpoint at that site. The presence of the c-myc rearrangement in the high-grade tumor suggest a role for c-myc in the clonal evolution of the low-grade tumor into a more aggressive lymphoma. The coexistence of both bcl-2 gene and c-myc oncogene rearrangements in the same tumor is unusual, with only a few cases reported. Furthermore, this case is unique in the direct demonstration of the histologic and clinical progression of a human lymphoma associated with the sequential rearrangement of the bcl-2 gene and the c-myc oncogene.
...
PMID:Sequential bcl-2 and c-myc oncogene rearrangements associated with the clinical transformation of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 250 18

Human follicular B cell lymphomas possess a t(14;18) interchromosomal translocation that juxtaposes the putative proto-oncogene bcl-2 with the immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy chain locus. We generated minigene constructs representing the bcl-2-Ig fusion gene found at this chromosomal breakpoint. These constructs were placed into the germ line of mice to assess the effects of the t(14;18) during development. The transgene demonstrates a lymphoid pattern of expression and uniformly results in an expanded follicular center cell population. Hyperplastic splenic follicles coalesce to form massive regions of splenic white pulp. Mice over 15 weeks of age demonstrate regional lymphadenopathy with abnormal cellular infiltrates. The expanded lymphoid compartment is composed predominantly of polyclonal B220-positive, IgM/IgD-positive B cells. Provocatively, the bcl-2-Ig transgene confers a survival advantage to a population of mature B cells assessed in vitro. bcl-2-Ig transgenic mice document a prospective role for the t(14;18) in B cell growth and the pathogenesis of follicular lymphoma.
...
PMID:bcl-2-immunoglobulin transgenic mice demonstrate extended B cell survival and follicular lymphoproliferation. 264 47

We have performed gene rearrangement studies on the leukemic blasts of a patient with acute pre-B-cell leukemia. The patient had a 5 year history of follicular lymphoma, which developed into acute pre-B-cell leukemia. The leukemic blasts revealed a karyotype with two translocations, t(8; 14) and t(14; 18), characteristic for Burkitt's lymphoma and follicular lymphoma. The cells are TdT positive, do not possess surface immunoglobulin, and they show immunoglobulin gene rearrangement. The mu heavy chain and kappa light chain constant (C mu and C kappa) loci are deleted, while the gamma and lambda light chain constant (C gamma and C lambda) region genes are rearranged. Both alleles of the heavy chain joining segment (JH) are rearranged on chromosome 14q+, one of them with the bcl-2 oncogene from chromosome 18. The breakpoint of the t(14; 18) translocation occurs in the major breakpoint cluster region in the 3' untranslated region of bcl-2. On chromosome 8 a c-myc rearrangement was mapped immediately 5' to the c-myc first exon in a region involved in sporadic Burkitt lymphoma. The data are consistent with our previous hypothesis on the evolution of B-cell malignancies: a rare pre-B cell develops a t(14; 18) translocation during immunoglobulin VDJ joining that results in an expansion of a follicular lymphoma clone carrying an activated bcl-2 gene. Within the clone of pre-B cells a second translocation, t(8; 14), occurs during heavy chain isotype switching that results in the deregulation of the c-myc involved in the translocation.
...
PMID:Pre-B-cell leukemia with a t(8; 14) and a t(14; 18) translocation is preceded by follicular lymphoma. 313 17

In most human follicular lymphomas, the chromosome translocation t(14;18) occurs within two breakpoint clustering regions on chromosome 18, the major one at the 3' untranslated region of the bcl-2 gene and the minor one at 3' of the gene. Analysis of a panel of follicular lymphoma DNAs using probes for the first exon of the bcl-2 gene indicates that DNA rearrangements may also occur 5' to the involved bcl-2 gene. In this case the IgH locus and the bcl-2 gene are found in the order 3' C gamma S gamma/mu JH 5'::5' bcl-2 3' (where C = constant, S = switch, and JH = joining segment of the heavy chain locus), suggesting that an inversion also occurred during the translocation process. The coding regions of the bcl-2 gene, however, are left intact in all cases of follicular lymphoma studied to date.
...
PMID:DNA rearrangements in human follicular lymphoma can involve the 5' or the 3' region of the bcl-2 gene. 354 8

From an acute B-cell leukemia cell line, a DNA probe was obtained that was specific for chromosome 18 and flanked the heavy chain joining region of the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus on chromosome 14. This probe detected rearrangement of the homologous DNA segment in the leukemic cells and in follicular lymphoma cells with the t(14:18) chromosome translocation but not in other neoplastic or normal B or T cells. The probe appears to identify bcl-2, a gene locus on chromosome 18 (band q21) that is unrelated to known oncogenes and may be important in the pathogenesis of B-cell neoplasms with this translocation.
...
PMID:Cloning of the chromosome breakpoint of neoplastic B cells with the t(14;18) chromosome translocation. 609 63


1 2 3 4 Next >>