McEvoy C R E, Seshadri R, Morley A A, Firgaira F A
Department of Haematology and Genetic Pathology, Flinders Medical Center and Flinders University of South Australia, Bedford Park.
Tissue Antigens. 2002 Sep;60(3):235-43. doi: 10.1034/j.1399-0039.2002.600305.x.
The Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) class I molecules are critical factors in T cell recognition of abnormal, including neoplastic, cells. Loss of HLA class I expression phenotypes, as defined by immunohistochemistry-based tests, have been previously described in many types of cancer. Here we describe a microsatellite marker DNA-based loss of heterozygosity (LOH) analysis of three distinct chromosomal regions which have been implicated in HLA class I expression on a cohort of 99 unselected sporadic breast cancer samples. These regions comprise the 4Mb major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region on chromosome 6p, which contains the HLA class I heavy chain loci and other genes responsible for antigen processing, the HLA class I light chain (beta-2-microglobulin, beta2m) gene on chromosome 15q, and the putative HLA class I modifier of methylation gene (MEMO-1) on chromosome 1p. Additional chromosome 6 markers were also employed to determine the likely genetic mechanism for MHC loss. We show that 25/99 (25%) of samples show allelic loss within the MHC, 28/95 informative samples (29%) show allelic loss of beta2m and 21/76 informative samples (28%) show allelic loss of MEMO-1. Approximately half of the samples are predicted to have compromised HLA class I gene expression due to LOH at one and/or other of these three loci. Sequencing of the remaining beta2m allele in samples displaying beta2m LOH failed to detect any additional intragenic mutations. Analysis of the frequency of samples showing LOH at either 0, 1, 2 or 3 of the genomic regions analyzed suggested clustering of tumors into either 'no loci loss' or '3 loci loss' categories. These results reveal major underlying genetic causes for the high level of HLA class I expression loss seen in breast cancer.
人类白细胞抗原(HLA)I类分子是T细胞识别异常细胞(包括肿瘤细胞)的关键因素。基于免疫组织化学检测所定义的HLA I类分子表达表型缺失,此前已在多种癌症类型中有所描述。在此,我们对99例未经选择的散发性乳腺癌样本队列进行了基于微卫星标记DNA的杂合性缺失(LOH)分析,涉及三个与HLA I类分子表达相关的不同染色体区域。这些区域包括6号染色体短臂上4Mb的主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)区域,该区域包含HLA I类重链基因座以及其他负责抗原加工的基因;15号染色体长臂上的HLA I类轻链(β2-微球蛋白,β2m)基因;以及1号染色体上假定的HLA I类甲基化修饰基因(MEMO-1)。还使用了额外的6号染色体标记来确定MHC缺失可能的遗传机制。我们发现,25/99(25%)的样本在MHC内出现等位基因缺失,28/95例信息充分的样本(29%)出现β2m等位基因缺失,21/76例信息充分的样本(28%)出现MEMO-1等位基因缺失。大约一半的样本预计因这三个基因座中一个和/或其他基因座的LOH而导致HLA I类基因表达受损。对显示β2m LOH的样本中剩余β2m等位基因进行测序,未检测到任何额外的基因内突变。对在分析的0、1、2或3个基因组区域出现LOH的样本频率分析表明,肿瘤可分为“无基因座缺失”或“3个基因座缺失”类别。这些结果揭示了乳腺癌中HLA I类分子表达缺失水平较高的主要潜在遗传原因。