Interestingly, the leukaemia and the derived cell line each displayed different, clonal patterns of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements providing direct evidence that the t(9;22) translocation which results in the expression of the p190 bcr-abl protein must occur before immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement.
To investigate the significance of the C-terminal Abl actin-binding domain within Bcr/Abl p190 in the development of leukemia/lymphoma in vivo, mutant p190 DNA constructs were used to generate transgenic mice.
We conclude that pl90 BCR-ABL transcripts are frequently present at a low level in p210 BCR-ABL-positive leukemias. p190 mRNA may arise through alternative or missplicing and its presence is probably of no pathogenetic significance.