Islamabad,
Dec 16: The most comprehensive search to date of DNA abnormalities in
chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) has unearthed several new altered genes that
drive this common blood cancer, a finding that could potentially help doctors
predict whether an individual patient's disease will progress rapidly or remain
indolent for years, say scientists from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the
Broad Institute.
Using powerful "next-generation" DNA sequencing, the
teams identified nine frequently mutated genes across 91 patients. Catherine J.
Wu, MD, of Dana-Farber, a co-senior author of the report, says five of the
mutated genes are implicated in CLL for the first time.
Wu says that
mutations in one of the new genes, SF3B1, interfere with gene splicing, or
"editing" of RNA messages that form a genetic template the cell uses to build a
specified protein. "We have identified a new cancer pathway -- aberrant RNA
splicing -- that has been underappreciated," says Wu, a researcher in
Dana-Farber's Cancer Vaccine Center.
An advanced online publication has
been scheduled for Dec. 12 by the New England Journal of Medicine, to coincide
with a presentation of the results (abstract 463) at the American Society of
Hematology's 2011 annual meeting on Dec. 12 at 10:30 a.m. PST.
The
study's other two co-senior authors are Jennifer Brown, MD, PhD, of Dana-Farber
and Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Gad Getz, PhD, of the Broad Institute,
where the sequencing search was carried out.
CLL is the most common form
of leukemia. The American Cancer Society expects it will be diagnosed in 14,570
patients in 2011, and projects 4,380 deaths. The behavior of the disease differs
widely among patients. About half the time, CLL is aggressive, worsening
steadily and rapidly, often with fatal outcomes. In many other patients, the
leukemia is said to be "indolent," causing few symptoms for years or even
decades. Doctors often choose not to treat the indolent form until symptoms
become life-threatening.
Physicians have only a limited set of markers to
predict the course of CLL in an individual, such as the presence of certain
types of chromosome damage in the cancer cells, which are associated with more
aggressive disease. Previous searches for predictive genetic clues spotted only
a small number of "driver" mutations, but those hunts were limited in their
power by the small number of tumor samples in the study.
The latest
search harnessed Illumina sequencing technology at the Broad Institute to
sequence leukemia and matched normal DNA samples from 91 patients with CLL,
looking for frequently mutated genes in the tumors. They sequenced the entire
genome in three patient samples, and only the protein-coding genes, collectively
termed the "exome," in the other 88 patients.
The search turned up nine
genes frequently mutated in the CLL samples, and these fell into five pathways
regulating DNA damage repair, cell-cycle control, Notch signaling, inflammation,
and RNA splicing/processing. Two had previously been associated with CLL and
cancer in general. Another two mutations -- MYD88 and NOTCH1 -- were implicated
in leukemia this year (2011). The remaining five, now identified for the first
time as culprits in CLL, are SF3B1, FBXW7,
The SF3B1 gene was the second
most commonly mutated gene, being found abnormal in 14 of the 91 leukemia DNA
samples. The gene's full name is Splicing Factor 3b, subunit 1, and the protein
it makes is part of the "spliceosome" -- a collection of proteins that govern
the splicing out of extraneous RNA molecules ("introns") to create the RNA
message ("exons"), or molecular recipe, from which the cell manufactures
proteins for the body.
"Defects in splicing have not previously been
implicated in the biology of CLL," the researchers wrote.
The researchers
checked to see whether CLL samples that contained the mutated genes also had
specific deletions in chromosomes (the DNA structures that carry genes)
previously known to signal a poor outlook in patients. They found that, indeed,
the SF3B1 gene was often found in tandem with a particular chromosomal
abnormality, consistent with a more aggressive form of CLL.
However,
independent of the presence of the chromosomal deletion, the study revealed that
a mutated SF3B1 gene by itself was a red flag for an aggressive case of CLL;
patients harboring the mutant SF3B1 gene were more likely to need treatment
sooner than individuals lacking the gene. Wu said that that the gene alteration
might serve as a biomarker. Since these patients have more aggressive disease,
knowledge of the presence of the gene alteration might prompt physicians early
on to consider alternatives to conventional chemotherapy, such as earlier use of
stem cell transplants to quell the disease.
The researchers said the
study findings show the value of large-scale genome searches in elucidating
cancers. The numerous genetic flaws uncovered by the search could not only aid
in the prediction of disease course, they said, but also offer clues to the
biological underpinnings of CLL, paving the way for novel targeted
treatments.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Massive DNA search uncovers new mutations driving blood cancer
Massive DNA search uncovers new mutations driving blood cancer
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