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Prevalent Involvement of Illegitimate V(D)J Recombination in Chromosome 9p21 Deletions in Lymphoid Leukemia

55

Citations

27

References

2002

Year

Abstract

To understand molecular pathways underlying 9p21 deletions, which lead to inactivation of the p16/CDKN2A, p14/ARF, and/or p15/CDKN2B genes, in lymphoid leukemia, 30 breakpoints were cloned from 15 lymphoid leukemia cell lines. Seventeen (57%) breakpoints were mapped at five breakpoint cluster sites, BCS-LL1 to LL5, each of <15 bp. Two breakpoint cluster sites were located within the ARF and CDKN2B loci, respectively, whereas the remaining three were located >100 kb distal to the CDKN2A, ARF, and CDKN2B loci. The sequences of breakpoint junctions indicated that deletions in the 11 (73%) cell lines were mediated by illegitimate V(D)J recombination targeted at the five BCS-LL and six other sites, which contain sequences similar to recombination signal sequences for V(D)J recombination. An extrachromosomal V(D)J recombination assay indicated that BCS-LL3, at which the largest number of breakpoints (i.e. five breakpoints) was clustered, has a V(D)J recombination potential 150-fold less than the consensus recombination signal sequence. Three other BCS-LLs tested also showed V(D)J recombination potential, although it was lower than that of BCS-LL3. These results indicated that illegitimate V(D)J recombination, which was targeted at several ectopic recombination signal sequences widely distributed in 9p21, caused a large fraction of 9p21 deletions in lymphoid leukemia.

References

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