Diverse karyotypic abnormalities of the c-myc locus associated with c-myc dysregulation and tumor progression in multiple myeloma

Y Shou, ML Martelli, A Gabrea, Y Qi… - Proceedings of the …, 2000 - National Acad Sciences
Y Shou, ML Martelli, A Gabrea, Y Qi, LA Brents, A Roschke, G Dewald, IR Kirsch
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2000National Acad Sciences
Translocations involving c-myc and an Ig locus have been reported rarely in human multiple
myeloma (MM). Using specific fluorescence in situ hybridization probes, we show complex
karyotypic abnormalities of the c-myc or L-myc locus in 19 of 20 MM cell lines and
approximately 50% of advanced primary MM tumors. These abnormalities include unusual
and complex translocations and insertions that often juxtapose myc with an IgH or IgL locus.
For two advanced primary MM tumors, some tumor cells contain a karyotypic abnormality of …
Translocations involving c-myc and an Ig locus have been reported rarely in human multiple myeloma (MM). Using specific fluorescence in situ hybridization probes, we show complex karyotypic abnormalities of the c-myc or L-myc locus in 19 of 20 MM cell lines and approximately 50% of advanced primary MM tumors. These abnormalities include unusual and complex translocations and insertions that often juxtapose myc with an IgH or IgL locus. For two advanced primary MM tumors, some tumor cells contain a karyotypic abnormality of the c-myc locus, whereas other tumor cells do not, indicating that this karyotypic abnormality of c-myc occurs as a late event. All informative MM cell lines show monoallelic expression of c-myc. For Burkitt's lymphoma and mouse plasmacytoma tumors, balanced translocation that juxtaposes c-myc with one of the Ig loci is an early, invariant event that is mediated by B cell-specific DNA modification mechanisms. By contrast, for MM, dysregulation of c-myc apparently is caused principally by complex genomic rearrangements that occur during late stages of MM progression and do not involve B cell-specific DNA modification mechanisms.
National Acad Sciences