To define further the prevalence of this abnormality in multiple myeloma, we studied a series of 17 patients with this disease with concomitant chromosome analysis and Southern blotting, using a probe specific for the major translocation cluster of the BCL-1 oncogene which is located at chromosome 11q13.
Detection of PRAD1 expression may offer an easier alternative to cytogenetic analysis in myeloma and is a potentially useful indicator of a poor prognosis.
IL-2-dependent clones established from the DN alphabeta T cell population in the PEC of IL-2 receptor alpha-chain transgenic B6 mice exhibited potent cytotoxicity against a series of B cell lineage leukemias and myelomas, such as CD5+BCL1 and MOPC, without affecting NK-susceptible targets.
Dysregulation of cyclin D1 by a t(11;14)(q13;q32) translocation occurs in most cases of mantle-cell lymphoma and in approximately 30% of multiple myeloma (MM) tumors in which a 14q32 translocation can be detected.
Both methods were applied to isolate VH genes from murine B cell lymphoma (A20 and BCL1), myeloma (NS1) and hybridoma (SP6) cell lines and from freshly isolated human chronic lymphocytic leukemia and lymphoma cells.
This study demonstrated that CCND1 and FGFR3 genes are involved together in about 50% of MM and primary PCL patients with illegitimate IGH rearrangements.
Our results confirm previous findings that the 11q13 breakpoints in MM are scattered throughout the 11q13 region encompassing the cyclin D1 gene, thus suggesting the absence of 11q13 breakpoint clusters in MM.
Detection of cyclin D1 may be used as a highly specific marker of MCL because it is expressed in virtually all of these tumors, but in only a few reported cases of aggressive variants of chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL) and a small percentage of cases of multiple myeloma.
Our data indicate that the t(11;14) translocation in MM leads to cyclin D1 overexpression and that immunohistochemical analysis may represent a reliable means of identifying this lesion in MM.
Although cyclin D1 overexpression represents a characteristic feature of all MM cell lines with t(11;14), our results demonstrate aberrant expression of a second putative oncogene in a subset of these cases, due to juxtaposition to IgH enhancers.
There is a promiscuous array of nonrandom chromosomal partners (and oncogenes), with the 3 most frequent partners (11q13 [cyclin D1]; 4p16 [FGFR3 and MMSET]; 16q23 [c-maf]) involved in nearly half of MM tumors.
We conclude that in low to intermediately proliferative MM cases, cyclin D1 is probably upregulated by t(11;14), but an alternative mechanism is more probable in highly proliferative MM.
Among the recently discovered myeloma-specific gene alterations associated with chromosomal translocations, cyclin D1/PRAD1/Bcl-1 overexpression caused by t(11;14)(q13;q32) is considered to be the most frequent in myeloma patients and cell lines, and may be a prognostic factor clinically.
The presence of switch translocations was supported by demonstrating up-regulated expression in myeloma marrow of cyclin D1 and fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), candidate oncogenes on chromosomes 11q13 and 4p16, respectively.
A total of 156 genes, including FGFR3 and CCND1, exhibited highly elevated ("spiked") expression in at least 4 of the 74 MM cases (range, 4-25 spikes).
The t(11;14)(q13;q32) results in up-regulation of cyclin D1 and is the most common translocation detected in multiple myeloma, where it is also associated with a lymphoplasmacytic morphology.
Strong cyclin D1 mRNA overexpression was detected in mantle cell lymphomas (23 of 23), hairy cell leukemias (5 of 19), and multiple myelomas (7 of 23) with particularly high levels in 2 of the latter cases.