Lens D, Dyer M J, Garcia-Marco J M, De Schouwer P J, Hamoudi R A, Jones D, Farahat N, Matutes E, Catovsky D
Academic Department of Haematology and Cytogenetics, Institute of Cancer Research, London.
Br J Haematol. 1997 Dec;99(4):848-57. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2141.1997.4723278.x.
To determine the role of the p53 gene in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and its possible involvement in the pathogenesis of a progressive form of CLL characterized by > 10%, prolymphocytes (CLL/PL), we selected 32 cases, 17 with typical morphology and 15 CLL/PL. The extent of inactivation of p53 was examined by assessing loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 17p13.3, by sequencing the highly conserved region (exons 5-9) of the p53 gene and by analysing p53 protein expression. LOH was detected in 8/28 (29%) cases, p53 mutations in 5/32 (16%) cases and p53 expression in 5/27 (19%) cases. Overall 11 cases (30%) had p53 abnormalities of which eight cases had CLL/PL. There was a significant association between CLL/PL and p53 abnormalities (P=0.05); 75% of cases with LOH, 80% of p53 mutations and 80% of cases positive for p53 protein had CLL/PL. Thus, p53 inactivation is the first gene abnormality identified so far to be involved in the development of CLL/PL. All the cases with typical CLL and p53 abnormalities had only one allele affected whereas 4/6 CLL/PL had both alleles inactivated. This difference in the extent of p53 inactivation suggests that accumulation of p53 abnormalities may be associated with progression of CLL to CLL/PL. CLL cases with p53 abnormalities were characterized by a higher incidence of stage C (P<0.025), a higher proliferative rate (P=0.05), short survival (P<0.005) and resistance to first-line therapy (P<0.02) but not to nucleoside analogues. Analysis of the correlation between p53 status and incidence of trisomy 12 by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) showed that trisomy 12 was more frequent in cases without p53 abnormalities, suggesting that trisomy 12 and p53 may represent different pathways of transformation in CLL.
为了确定p53基因在慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL)中的作用及其可能参与以原淋巴细胞>10%为特征的进行性CLL(CLL/PL)发病机制的情况,我们选取了32例病例,其中17例具有典型形态,15例为CLL/PL。通过评估17p13.3处的杂合性缺失(LOH)、对p53基因的高度保守区域(外显子5 - 9)进行测序以及分析p53蛋白表达,来检测p53的失活程度。在28例中的8例(29%)检测到LOH,32例中的5例(16%)检测到p53突变,27例中的5例(19%)检测到p53表达。总体而言,11例(30%)存在p53异常,其中8例为CLL/PL。CLL/PL与p53异常之间存在显著关联(P = 0.05);75%的LOH病例、80%的p53突变病例以及80%的p53蛋白阳性病例为CLL/PL。因此,p53失活是迄今为止确定的首个参与CLL/PL发生发展的基因异常。所有具有典型CLL且p53异常的病例仅一个等位基因受影响,而6例CLL/PL中有4例两个等位基因均失活。p53失活程度的这种差异表明,p53异常的积累可能与CLL向CLL/PL的进展相关。具有p53异常的CLL病例的特征为C期发生率较高(P < 0.025)、增殖率较高(P = 0.05)、生存期短(P < 0.005)以及对一线治疗耐药(P < 0.02),但对核苷类似物不耐药。通过荧光原位杂交(FISH)分析p53状态与12号染色体三体发生率之间的相关性表明,12号染色体三体在无p53异常的病例中更常见,这表明12号染色体三体和p53可能代表CLL中不同的转化途径。