Purpose: Dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is the major target of methotrexate, a key component in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treatment. We recently reported an association of DHFR promoter polymorphisms with ALL outcome. Lower event-free survival correlated with haplotype *1, defined by A -317 and C -1610 alleles. Haplotype *1 was also associated higher DHFR expression. Experimental Design: Here, we analyzed adjacent 400-bp region participating in DHFR regulation as both a major promoter and a noncoding minor transcript. Results: Six polymorphisms were identified, of which five were single nucleotide polymorphisms and one was length polymorphism composed of variable number of 9-bp elements and 9-bp insertion/deletion. Haplotype analysis including all promoter polymorphisms revealed diversification of haplotype *1 into five subtypes (*1a-*1e). DNA variations of major promoter/noncoding transcript region and haplotype *1 subtypes were subsequently analyzed for the association with ALL outcome. Lower event-free survival was associated with an A allele of G 308 A polymorphism (P = 0.02) and with *1b haplotype (P = 0.01). This association was particularly striking in high-risk patients (P = 0.001) and was subsequently confirmed in independent patient cohort (P = 0.02). Haplotype *1b was the only haplotype *1 subtype associated with higher mRNA levels. Conclusions: The study provides a new insight into DHFR regulatory variations predisposing to an event in ALL patients. (Clin Cancer Res 2009;15(22):6931-8)
The first comprehensive molecular genetic study of Serbian CAH patients revealed two novel CYP21A2 mutations. This study will enable genetic counseling in our population and contribute to better understanding of molecular landscape of CAH in Europe.
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency is one of the most common endocrine diseases, yet genetic diagnosis is among the most complicated of all monogenic disorders. It has an overall incidence of 1:10000-1:20000, it is inherited in autosomal recessive pattern and caused by mutations affecting CYP21A2 gene. Based on the phenotypic expression, this disease is categorized into severe, classical form revealed at birth and mild, non-classical form. Although diagnosis could be established based on biochemical tests and distinctive clinical features, molecular genetic testing is crucial for diagnosis confirmation, detection of carriers and asymptomatic patients, disease prognosis, as well as for providing proper genetic counselling and prenatal diagnosis. Based on CYP21A2 mutational spectrum and frequencies in Serbia, in this paper we propose an optimal molecular genetic diagnostic algorithm for CAH and discuss genetic mechanisms underlying the disease. The complete diagnostic procedure combines multiplex minisequencing technique (SNaPshot PCR) as a method for rapid detection of common point mutations, direct sequencing of whole CYP21A2 gene and PCR with sequence specific primers (PCR-SSP) for large gene rearrangements detection (CYP21A1P/CYP21A2 chimeras). While SNaPshot PCR assay analyses ten common mutations (c.290-13A/C>G, p.P30L, p.R356W, p.G110fs, p.V281L, p.Q318X, p.L307fs, p.I172N, Cluster p.[I236N;V237E;M239K] and p.P453S) which account for over 80% of all CYP21A2 mutations in Serbian population, direct sequencing of CYP21A2 gene is needed to identify potential rare or novel mutations present in Serbian population with frequency of 1.8%. Additionally, large gene rearrangements which are present with frequency of 16.7% make PCR-SSP analysis an unavoidable part of molecular characterization of CAH in Serbia. Described molecular genetic strategy is intended to 458
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