Data di Pubblicazione:
2013
Abstract:
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a mature T-cell lymphoma that can present as a systemic or primary cutaneous disease. Systemic ALCL represents 2% to 5% of adult lymphoma but up to 30% of all pediatric cases. Two subtypes of systemic ALCL are currently recognized on the basis of the presence of a translocation involving the anaplastic lymphoma kinase ALK gene. Despite considerable progress, several questions remain open regarding the pathogenesis of both ALCL subtypes. To investigate the molecular pathogenesis and to assess the relationship between the ALK+ and ALK- ALCL subtypes, we performed a genome-wide DNA profiling using high-density, single nucleotide polymorphism arrays on a series of 64 cases and 7 cell lines. The commonest lesions were losses at 17p13 and at 6q21, encompassing the TP53 and PRDM1 genes, respectively. The latter gene, coding for BLIMP1, was inactivated by multiple mechanisms, more frequently, but not exclusively, in ALK-ALCL. In vitro and in vivo experiments showed that that PRDM1 is a tumor suppressor gene in ALCL models, likely acting as an antiapoptotic agent. Losses of TP53 and/or PRDM1 were present in 52% of ALK-ALCL, and in 29% of all ALCL cases with a clinical implication.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
Michela Boi; Andrea Rinaldi; Ivo Kwee; Paola Bonetti; Maria Todaro; Fabrizio Tabbò; Roberto Piva; Paola M. V. Rancoita; András Matolcsy; Botond Timar; Thomas Tousseyn; Socorro Maria Rodríguez-Pinilla; Miguel A. Piris; Sílvia Beà; Elias Campo; Govind Bhagat; Steven H. Swerdlow; Andreas Rosenwald; Maurilio Ponzoni; Ken H. Young; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Reinhard Dummer; Stefano Pileri; Emanuele Zucca; Giorgio Inghirami; Francesco Bertoni
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