Primary plasma cell leukemia (pPCL) is a rare, yet aggressive form of de novo plasma cell tumor, distinct from secondary PCL (sPCL) which represents a leukemic transformation of pre-existing multiple myeloma (MM). Herein, we performed a comprehensive molecular analysis of a prospective series of pPCLs by means of FISH, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array and gene expression profiling (GEP). IGH@ translocations were identified in 87% of pPCL cases, with prevalence of t(11;14) (40%) and t(14;16) (30.5%), whereas the most frequent numerical alterations involved 1p (38%), 1q (48%), 6q (29%), 8p (42%), 13q (74%), 14q (71%), 16q (53%), and 17p (35%). We identified a minimal biallelic deletion (1.5 Mb) in 8p21.2 encompassing the PPP2R2A gene, belonging to a family of putative tumor suppressors and found to be significantly down-regulated in deleted cases. Mutations of TP53 were identified in four cases, all but one associated with a monoallelic deletion of the gene, whereas activating mutations of the BRAF oncogene occurred in one case and were absent in N-and K-RAS. To evaluate the influence of allelic imbalances in transcriptional expression we performed an integrated genomic analysis with GEP data, showing a significant dosage effect of genes involved in transcription, translation, methyltransferase activity, apoptosis as well as Wnt and NF-kB signaling pathways. Overall, we provide a compendium of genomic alterations in a prospective series of pPCLs which may contribute to improve our understanding of the pathogenesis of this aggressive form of plasma cell dyscrasia and the mechanisms of tumor progression in MM. Am. J. Hematol. 88:16-23, 2013. V
Herpesviruses use gB and gH-gL glycoproteins to execute fusion. Other virus-specific glycoproteins are required for receptor binding and fusion activation. The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL131-128 proteins are essential for the infection of leukocytes, endothelial cells (ECs), and many epithelial cell lines. Here we show that UL131-128 play a role in a chain of events involving gB and gH during HCMV entry into ECs. An HCMV strain bearing the wild-type (wt) UL131-128 locus exhibited a gB transition from a protease-resistant to protease-sensitive form, a conformational change that was suppressed by a thiourea inhibitor of fusion (WY1768); in contrast, gH was susceptible to proteolysis throughout entry. Moreover, gB and gH transiently interacted, and a lipid mixing assay showed that the wt strain had carried out fusion by 60 min postinfection. However, these events were greatly altered when UL131-128-defective strains were used for infection or when there was an excess of soluble pUL128 during wt infection: the gB conformational change became WY1768 resistant, the gB-gH complex was no longer observed, and fusion was prevented. Both gB and gH in this case showed late protease resistance, related to their endocytic uptake. Our data point to the involvement of UL131-128 proteins in driving gB through a WY1768-sensitive fold transition, thus promoting a short-lived gB-gH complex and fusion; they also suggest that HCMV fuses with the EC plasma membrane and that endocytosis ensues only when the virus cannot trigger UL131-128-dependent steps.Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), the prototypical member of the Betaherpesvirinae subfamily, is the leading infectious cause of congenital defects, a major opportunist in transplant recipients and immunocompromised patients, and a suspected cofactor for cardiovascular diseases, systemic sclerosis, and gastrointestinal cancer (7,27,29,41,42,49). Clinical isolates of HCMV infect various cell types in vitro, including endothelial cells (ECs), thus replicating the broad cell type tropism observed in HCMV infections of immunocompromised subjects (EC-tropic strains). However, laboratory propagation in fibroblasts (FBs) restricts viral tropism (FB-tropic strains), and mutations causing the loss of tropism for ECs, epithelial cells, polymorphonuclear leukocytes, and dendritic cells (DCs) have been mapped to the contiguous UL131, UL130, and UL128 open reading frames (ORFs) (13,25,18,56).There is considerable indirect evidence indicating that UL131-128 proteins act as regulators of virus-cell fusion: (i) FB-tropic strains fail to transfer tegument pp65-UL83 protein to EC nuclei (18), which suggests that infection stops before virus uncoating; (ii) an HCMV deletion mutant lacking the UL128-UL150 ORFs infects retinal pigment epithelial cells after exposure to polyethylene glycol in order to force fusion between viral and cellular membranes (50); and (iii) EC-tropic strains are syncytiogenic at a high multiplicity of infection (18,56).The membrane-spanning glycoproteins gB and gH and the soluble gL...
Several molecular markers drive diagnostic classification, prognostic stratification, and/or prediction of response to therapy in patients with gliomas. Among them, IDH gene mutations are valuable markers for defining subtypes and are strongly associated with epigenetic silencing of the methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) gene. However, little is known about the percentage of MGMT-methylated alleles in IDH-mutated cells or the potential association between MGMT methylation and deletion of chromosome 10q, which encompasses the MGMT locus. Here, we quantitatively assessed MGMT methylation and IDH1 mutation in 208 primary glioma samples to explore possible differences associated with the IDH genotype. We also explored a potential association between MGMT methylation and loss of chromosome 10q. We observed that MGMT methylation was heterogeneously distributed within glioma samples irrespective of IDH status suggesting an incomplete overlap between IDH1-mutated and MGMT-methylated alleles and indicating a partial association between these 2 events. Moreover, loss of one MGMT allele did not affect the methylation level of the remaining allele. MGMT was methylated in about half of gliomas harboring a 10q deletion; in those cases, loss of heterozygosity might be considered a second hit leading to complete inactivation of MGMT and further contributing to tumor progression.
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