In this issue of Cancer Cell, Churchman et al. add to the list of leukemia predisposition genes with the identification and characterization of germline IKZF1 variants in childhood ALL.
The IKZF1 SNPs, rs10235796 and rs6964969, and the CDKN2A SNP rs3731246 (previously unreported) could serve as risk markers for ALL susceptibility in Yemeni children.
In addition, IKZF1 has been implicated in roles involved in some hematologic traits or abnormalities, such as erythrocyte measures, myelofibrosis, and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), which may be common clinical manifestations or co-occurrence hematological diseases of patients with SLE.
These findings provide a rationale for the surprisingly high frequency of IKAROS deletions in Ph(+) ALL and identify IKAROS-mediated cell cycle exit as the endpoint of an emerging pathway of pre-B cell receptor-mediated tumor suppression.
In contrast, risk of ALL/MLL- was increased in infants homozygous for the IKZF1 variant (OR = 5.1, 95% CI = 1.8-14.5) but the variant did not modify risk of ALL/MLL+.
These SNPs are located at CDKN2A (rs3731217) and IKZF1 (rs4132601), genes frequently lost in ALL, and at CEBPE (rs2239633), ARID5B (rs7089424), PIP4K2A (rs10764338), and GATA3 (rs3824662), genes located on chromosomes gained in high-hyperdiploid ALL.
The multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) method was used to detect the copy number alterations (CNAs) of IKAROS family zinc finger 1 (<i>IKZF1</i>), paired box 5 (<i>PAX5</i>), ETS variant 6 (<i>ETV6</i>), RB transcriptional corepressor 1 (<i>RB1</i>), BTG anti-proliferation factor 1 (<i>BTG1</i>), early B-cell factor 1 (<i>EBF1</i>), cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 2A/2B (<i>CDKN2A/2B</i>) and cytokine receptor like factor 2 (<i>CRLF2</i>) genes in 87 adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in China.
This study aimed at determining the prevalence of INK4 deletions and their impact on outcome in 125 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) at first relapse using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction.
Case-control comparisons revealed dose-dependent associations between ARID5B rs10821936, ARID5B rs10994982, and IKZF1rs11978267 and childhood ALL overall, and B lineage and B lineage hyperdiploid ALL examined separately (all allelic odds ratios ≥1.33, Ptrend≤0.001).
These findings suggest that, in ALL leukemogenesis, loss of CDKN2A and other target genes in the instability region is frequently associated with BCR/ABL1 and IKZF1 dysfunction.
The distribution of genotype rs7073837 in ARID5B significantly differed between ALL and controls (P=0.046), while those of IKZF1 (rs6964823, rs4132601, and rs6944602) and ARID5B (rs10740055 and rs7089424) did not.
To gain a fuller understanding of the role of deletions of chromosome 9 in the development of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), we performed detailed deletional mapping of chromosome 9 in 54 primary ALL samples with matched normal DNA using 22 highly polymorphic markers; and this information was combined with our previous data concerning the presence of deletions of CDKN2/INK4A/p16 and CDKN2B/INK4B/p15 in these samples.
We therefore analyzed the clinical and biological implications of this feature by studying p16ink4a expression in 58 cases of childhood ALL. mRNA and protein were significantly correlated and both appeared more highly expressed in B than in T lineage ALLs: 13 out of the 15 T cell ALLs did not show any p16ink4a expression.
Integrated use of minimal residual disease classification and IKZF1 alteration status accurately predicts 79% of relapses in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
We identified risk loci for ALL at 7p12.2 (IKZF1, rs4132601, odds ratio (OR) = 1.69, P = 1.20 x 10(-19)), 10q21.2 (ARID5B, rs7089424, OR = 1.65, P = 6.69 x 10(-19)) and 14q11.2 (CEBPE, rs2239633, OR = 1.34, P = 2.88 x 10(-7)).
The present study examines the incidence of IKZF1, CDKN2A/B, PAX5, EBF1, ETV6, BTG1, RB1, JAK2, and Xp22.33 gene deletions/duplications associated with pediatric ALL in Iran and investigates the possible effect of these mutations on drug resistance.
Recent experimental mouse modeling of B-progenitor ALL has shown that IKZF1 alterations have multiple effects, including arresting differentiation, skewing lineage of leukemia from myeloid to lymphoid, and, in Ph+ leukemia, conferring resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy without abrogating ABL1 inhibition.
The high incidence of p16(INK4A) gene deletions in pediatric T cell lineage ALL suggests that this genetic alteration could represent an early and key event in the development of such a malignancy but it should not have any prognostic value.
At diagnosis, p15 methylation occurred in 29 (58%) AML patients, and 10 (40.0%) ALL patients. p16 methylation occurred in two (4%) AML and two (8%) ALL patients.
The aims of this study were to estimate the incidences of BCR/ABL, MLL, TEL/AML1 rearrangements, and p16 deletions in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), to identify new abnormalities, and to demonstrate the usefulness of interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH).