Deletions on the long arm of chromosome 6 are frequently found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL). We have used polymerase chain reaction analysis to study loss of heterozygosity of 16 microsatellite markers on chromosome 6 in 74 ALL and 54 NHL patients. Our results show that deletions of 6q in ALL are more frequent than what has been reported in previous studies, occurring in at least 32% of the patients. The corresponding figure for NHL patients is 7%. Our results define a region of minimal deletion in ALL of less than 500 kb between markers D6S1709 and D6S434. The common region of deletion in NHL is located telomeric of this region. Thus, two different tumor suppressor genes on chromosome 6q seem to be relevant for the development of lymphoid malignancies.
Deletions on the long arm of chromosome 6 are frequently found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL). We have used polymerase chain reaction analysis to study loss of heterozygosity of 16 microsatellite markers on chromosome 6 in 74 ALL and 54 NHL patients. Our results show that deletions of 6q in ALL are more frequent than what has been reported in previous studies, occurring in at least 32% of the patients. The corresponding figure for NHL patients is 7%. Our results define a region of minimal deletion in ALL of less than 500 kb between markers D6S1709 and D6S434. The common region of deletion in NHL is located telomeric of this region. Thus, two different tumor suppressor genes on chromosome 6q seem to be relevant for the development of lymphoid malignancies.
Summary.Seventy-four patients with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) were analysed with limited allelotyping to detect loss of heterozygosity on chromosome segments 6q, 9p, 12p and 13q in order to detect patterns of genetic alteration. In the case of chromosome 9, analyses were also performed to detect inactivation of the p15 ink4B and p16 ink4 genes by Southern blot and sequencing techniques. The deletion data from these chromosomes were correlated to each other and to clinical features including prognosis. Allelic loss of these chromosomal regions could be detected in 24% (6q), 15% (12p) and 10% (13q) of the patients respectively, whereas aberrations involving 9p were detected in approximately 50% of the cases. There was an inverse correlation between loss of heterozygosity (LOH) for chromosome 12 and inactivation of the p16 ink4 gene. This finding may suggest that a leukaemogenic event on chromosome 12p affects the same pathway of cell-cycle control as p16 ink4 inactivation or, alternatively, reflects the fact that these mutations tend to occur in cells of different lineages.
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