Unique fusion of bcr and c-abl genes in Philadelphia chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia

A Hermans, N Heisterkamp, M von Lindern, S van Baal… - Cell, 1987 - cell.com
A Hermans, N Heisterkamp, M von Lindern, S van Baal, D Meijer, D van der Plas…
Cell, 1987cell.com
Summary The Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome, the product of t (9: 22), is the cytogenetic
hallmark of chronic myelogenous leukemia. The c-abl oncogene on chromosome 9 is
translocated to the Ph chromosome and linked to a breakpoint cluster region (bcr), which is
part of a large bcr gene. This results in the formation of a bcr-cabl fusion gene, which is
transcribed into an 8.5 kb chimeric mRNA encoding a 210 kd bcr-c-abl fusion protein. The
Ph chromosome is also found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL). Although the c …
Summary
The Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome, the product of t (9: 22), is the cytogenetic hallmark of chronic myelogenous leukemia. The c-abl oncogene on chromosome 9 is translocated to the Ph chromosome and linked to a breakpoint cluster region (bcr), which is part of a large bcr gene. This results in the formation of a bcr-cabl fusion gene, which is transcribed into an 8.5 kb chimeric mRNA encoding a 210 kd bcr-c-abl fusion protein. The Ph chromosome is also found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL). Although the c-abl is translocated and a new 190 kd c-abl protein has been identified, no breakpoints are observed in the bcr (Ph+ bcr-ALL). Here we show that in Ph+ bcr-ALL, breakpoints in chromosome 22 occur within the same bcr gene, but more 5’of the bcr. Cloning of a chimerit bcr-c-abl cDNA demonstrates that the fusion gene is transcribed into a 7 kb mRNA, encoding a novel fusion protein.
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