Characterization of the imprinted polycomb gene L3MBTL, a candidate 20q tumour suppressor gene, in patients with myeloid malignancies

AJ Bench, J Li, BJP Huntly, E Delabesse… - British journal of …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
AJ Bench, J Li, BJP Huntly, E Delabesse, N Fourouclas, AR Hunt, P Deloukas, AR Green
British journal of haematology, 2004Wiley Online Library
Chromosome 20q deletion is a recurrent chromosomal abnormality associated with myeloid
malignancies. L3MBTL represents a strong candidate tumour suppressor gene since it lies
within the common deleted region, is a member of the Polycomb‐like family, encodes the
human homologue of a Drosophila tumour suppressor and is expressed within
haematopoietic progenitor cells. We describe the structure of L3MBTL, identify two putative
promoters each associated with two CpG islands and characterize a complex pattern of …
Summary
Chromosome 20q deletion is a recurrent chromosomal abnormality associated with myeloid malignancies. L3MBTL represents a strong candidate tumour suppressor gene since it lies within the common deleted region, is a member of the Polycomb‐like family, encodes the human homologue of a Drosophila tumour suppressor and is expressed within haematopoietic progenitor cells. We describe the structure of L3MBTL, identify two putative promoters each associated with two CpG islands and characterize a complex pattern of alternative splicing events. Mutation analysis of the gene in patients with and without a 20q deletion identified several polymorphisms but no acquired mutations. The two CpG islands spanning promoter 2 undergo monoallelic methylation in normal haematopoietic cells consistent with imprinting of L3MBTL. Samples from patients with a 20q deletion retained either the methylated or unmethylated allele but retention of the methylated allele did not correlate with reduction in L3MBTL mRNA levels. The absence of a correlation between L3MBTL methylation and transcription could be shown to reflect loss of imprinting in one patient. In addition, our results demonstrate that inactivation of L3MBTL is not a common occurrence in patients with a 20q deletion or in cytogenetically normal patients with polycythaemia vera.
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