Gough Sheryl M, McDonald Margaret, Chen Xiao-Ning, Korenberg Julie R, Neri Antonino, Kahn Tomas, Eccles Michael R, Morris Christine M
Cancer Genetics Research Group, Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences, Christchurch, New Zealand.
BMC Genomics. 2003 Mar 3;4(1):9. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-4-9.
Chromosome band 10q24 is a gene-rich domain and host to a number of cancer, developmental, and neurological genes. Recurring translocations, deletions and mutations involving this chromosome band have been observed in different human cancers and other disease conditions, but the precise identification of breakpoint sites, and detailed characterization of the genetic basis and mechanisms which underlie many of these rearrangements has yet to be resolved. Towards this end it is vital to establish a definitive genetic map of this region, which to date has shown considerable volatility through time in published works of scientific journals, within different builds of the same international genomic database, and across the differently constructed databases.
Using a combination of chromosome and interphase fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), BAC end-sequencing and genomic database analysis we present a physical map showing that the order and chromosomal orientation of selected genes within 10q24 is CEN-CYP2C9-PAX2-HOX11-NFKB2-TEL. Our analysis has resolved the orientation of an otherwise dynamically evolving assembly of larger contigs upstream of this region, and in so doing verifies the order and orientation of a further 9 cancer-related genes and GOT1. This study further shows that the previously reported human papillomavirus type 6a DNA integration site HPV6AI1 does not map to 10q24, but that it maps at the interface of chromosome bands 14q13.3-q21.1.
This revised map will allow more precise localization of chromosome rearrangements involving chromosome band 10q24, and will serve as a useful baseline to better understand the molecular aetiology of chromosomal instability in this region. In particular, the relocation of HPV6AI1 is important to report because this HPV6a integration site, originally isolated from a tonsillar carcinoma, was shown to be rearranged in other HPV6a-related malignancies, including 2 of 25 genital condylomas, and 2 of 7 head and neck tumors tested. Our finding shifts the focus of this genomic interest from 10q24 to the chromosome 14 site.
染色体带10q24是一个基因丰富的区域,包含许多癌症、发育和神经学相关基因。在不同的人类癌症和其他疾病状况中已观察到涉及该染色体带的反复易位、缺失和突变,但断点位置的精确鉴定以及许多这些重排背后的遗传基础和机制的详细特征尚未得到解决。为此,建立该区域明确的遗传图谱至关重要,迄今为止,在科学期刊的已发表作品中、在同一国际基因组数据库的不同版本中以及在不同构建的数据库之间,该区域的图谱显示出相当大的波动性。
通过结合染色体和间期荧光原位杂交(FISH)、BAC末端测序和基因组数据库分析,我们展示了一幅物理图谱,表明10q24内所选基因的顺序和染色体方向为CEN-CYP2C9-PAX2-HOX11-NFKB2-TEL。我们的分析确定了该区域上游原本动态演变的较大重叠群组装的方向,从而验证了另外9个癌症相关基因和GOT1的顺序和方向。本研究还表明,先前报道的人乳头瘤病毒6a型DNA整合位点HPV6AI1并不定位于10q24,而是定位于染色体带14q13.3-q21.1的交界处。
这幅修订后的图谱将使涉及染色体带10q24的染色体重排定位更加精确,并将作为一个有用的基线,以更好地理解该区域染色体不稳定的分子病因。特别是,HPV6AI1的重新定位很重要,因为这个最初从扁桃体癌中分离出的HPV6a整合位点,在其他HPV6a相关恶性肿瘤中显示有重排,包括25例生殖器湿疣中的2例以及7例检测的头颈部肿瘤中的2例。我们的发现将该基因组研究的重点从10q24转移到了染色体14位点。