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The RAG-1/2 endonuclease causes genomic instability and controls CNS complications of lymphoblastic leukemia in p53/Prkdc-deficient mice

Authors :
Jana Karaskova
Michael D. Taylor
Ildiko Grandal
Jeremy A. Squire
Jayne S. Danska
Cynthia J. Guidos
Rebecca A. Gladdy
James T. Rutka
Christine J. Williams
Source :
Cancer Cell. (1):37-50
Publisher :
Cell Press.

Abstract

Double-strand DNA breaks (DSB) induce chromosomal translocations and gene amplification in cell culture, but mechanisms by which DSB cause genomic instability in vivo are poorly understood. We show that RAG-1/2-induced DSB cause IgH/c-Myc translocations in leukemic pro-B cells from p53/Prkdc-deficient mice. Strikingly, these translocations were complex, clonally heterogeneous and amplified. We observed reiterated IgH/c-Myc fusions on dicentric chromosomes, suggesting that amplification occurred by repeated cycles of bridge, breakage and fusion. Leukemogenesis was not mitigated in RAG-2/p53/Prkdc-deficient mice, but leukemic pro-B cells lacked IgH/c-Myc translocations. Thus, global genomic instability conferred by p53/Prkdc disruption efficiently transforms pro-B cells lacking RAG-1/2-induced DSB. Unexpectedly, RAG-2/p53/Prkdc-deficient mice also developed leptomeningeal leukemia, providing a novel spontaneous model for this frequent complication of human lymphoblastic malignancies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15356108
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....78422cd923b05cf9e415028e18333d3c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S1535-6108(02)00236-2