Inactivation of RB1 in mantle-cell lymphoma detected by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway inhibition and microarray analysis

M Pinyol, S Bea, L Plà, V Ribrag, J Bosq… - Blood, The Journal …, 2007 - ashpublications.org
M Pinyol, S Bea, L Plà, V Ribrag, J Bosq, A Rosenwald, E Campo, P Jares
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2007ashpublications.org
Mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is genetically characterized by the translocation t (11; 14)(q13;
q32) and a high number of secondary chromosomal abnormalities. To identify genes
inactivated in this lymphoma, we examined 5 MCL cell lines following a strategy previously
described in tumors with microsatellite instability that is based on the combined inhibition of
the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway and gene-expression profiling. This
approach, together with the design of a conservative algorithm for analysis of the results …
Abstract
Mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is genetically characterized by the translocation t(11;14)(q13;q32) and a high number of secondary chromosomal abnormalities. To identify genes inactivated in this lymphoma, we examined 5 MCL cell lines following a strategy previously described in tumors with microsatellite instability that is based on the combined inhibition of the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway and gene-expression profiling. This approach, together with the design of a conservative algorithm for analysis of the results, allowed the identification of 3 genes carrying premature stop codons. These genes were p53 with a mutation previously described in JEKO-1, the leukocyte-derived arginine aminopeptidase (LRAP) gene in REC-1 that showed a new splicing isoform generating a premature stop codon, and RB1 in UPN-1 that contained an intragenic homozygous deletion resulting in a truncated transcript and total loss of protein expression. The new LRAP isoform was detected also in 2 primary MCLs, whereas inactivating intragenic deletions of RB1 were found in the primary tumor from which UPN-1 was derived and 1 additional blastoid MCL. These tumors carried a concomitant inactivation of p53, whereas p16INK4a was wild type. These results indicate for the first time that RB1 may be inactivated in aggressive MCL by intragenic deletions.
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