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Genomic analysis reveals few genetic alterations in pediatric acute myeloid leukemia
Authors:Ina Radtke  Charles G Mullighan  Masami Ishii  Xiaoping Su  Jinjun Cheng  Jing Ma  Ramapriya Ganti  Zhongling Cai  Salil Goorha  Stanley B Pounds  Xueyuan Cao  Caroline Obert  Jianling Armstrong  Jinghui Zhang  Guangchun Song  Raul C Ribeiro  Jeffrey E Rubnitz  Susana C Raimondi  Sheila A Shurtleff  and James R Downing
Institution:Departments of aPathology.;cBiostatistics, and ;eOncology, and the ;bHartwell Center for Bioinformatics and Biotechnology, St. Jude Children''s Research Hospital, 262 Danny Thomas Place, Memphis, TN 38105; and ;dCenter for Biomedical Informatics and Information Technology, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, 2115 E. Jefferson Street, Rockville, MD 20892
Abstract:Pediatric de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive malignancy with current therapy resulting in cure rates of only 60%. To better understand the cause of the marked heterogeneity in therapeutic response and to identify new prognostic markers and therapeutic targets a comprehensive list of the genetic mutations that underlie the pathogenesis of AML is needed. To approach this goal, we examined diagnostic leukemic samples from a cohort of 111 children with de novo AML using single-nucleotide-polymorphism microarrays and candidate gene resequencing. Our data demonstrate that, in contrast to pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), de novo AML is characterized by a very low burden of genomic alterations, with a mean of only 2.38 somatic copy-number alterations per leukemia, and less than 1 nonsynonymous point mutation per leukemia in the 25 genes analyzed. Even more surprising was the observation that 34% of the leukemias lacked any identifiable copy-number alterations, and 28% of the leukemias with recurrent translocations lacked any identifiable sequence or numerical abnormalities. The only exception to the presence of few mutations was acute megakaryocytic leukemias, with the majority of these leukemias being characterized by a high number of copy-number alterations but rare point mutations. Despite the low overall number of lesions across the patient cohort, novel recurring regions of genetic alteration were identified that harbor known, and potential new cancer genes. These data reflect a remarkably low burden of genomic alterations within pediatric de novo AML, which is in stark contrast to most other human malignancies.
Keywords:copy number alterations  single-nucleotide-polymorphism (SNP)  microarray  candidate gene resequencing  loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH)
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