Multiple tumor-suppressor gene 1 inactivation is the most frequent genetic alteration in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

JM Cayuela, A Madani, L Sanhes, MH Stern, F Sigaux - 1996 - ashpublications.org
JM Cayuela, A Madani, L Sanhes, MH Stern, F Sigaux
1996ashpublications.org
No constant genetic alteration has yet been unravelled in T-cell acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (T-ALL), and, to date, the most frequent alteration, the SIL-TAL1 deletion, is found
in approximately 20% of cases. Recently, two genes have been identified, the multiple tumor-
suppressor gene 1 (MTS1) and multiple tumor-suppressor gene 2 (MTS2), whose products
inhibit cell cycle progression. A characterization of the MTS locus organization allowed to
determine the incidence of MTS1 and MTS2 inactivation in T-ALL. MTS1 and MTS2 …
No constant genetic alteration has yet been unravelled in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), and, to date, the most frequent alteration, the SIL-TAL1 deletion, is found in approximately 20% of cases. Recently, two genes have been identified, the multiple tumor- suppressor gene 1 (MTS1) and multiple tumor-suppressor gene 2 (MTS2), whose products inhibit cell cycle progression. A characterization of the MTS locus organization allowed to determine the incidence of MTS1 and MTS2 inactivation in T-ALL. MTS1 and MTS2 configurations were determined by Southern blotting using 8 probes in 59 patients with T- ALL (40 children and 19 adults). Biallelic MTS1 inactivation by deletions and/or rearrangements was observed in 45 cases (76%). Monoallelic alterations were found in 6 cases (10%). The second MTS1 allele was studied in the 4 cases with available material. A point mutation was found in 2 cases. The lack of MTS1 mRNA expression was observed by Northern blot analysis in a third case. A normal single- strand conformation polymorphism pattern of MTS1 exons 1alpha and 2 was found and MTS1 RNA was detected in the fourth case, but a rearrangement occurring 5′ to MTS1 exon 1 alpha deleting MTS1 exon 1Beta was documented. One case presented a complex rearrangement. Germline configuration for MTS1 and MTS2 was found in only 7 cases. The localization of the 17 breakpoints occurring in the MTS locus were determined. Ten of them (59%) are clustered in a 6-kb region located 5 kb downstream to the newly identified MTS1 exon 1Beta. No rearrangement disrupting MTS2 was detected and more rearrangements spared MTS2 than MTS1 (P<.01). MTS1 but not MTS2 RNA was detected by Northern blotting in the human thymus. These data strongly suggest that MTS1 is the functional target of rearrangements in T-ALL. MTS1 inactivation, observed in at least 80% of T-ALL, is the most consistent genetic defect found in this disease to date.
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