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Genome-wide association study of 40,000 individuals identifies two novel loci associated with bipolar disorder (2016)
Hou, Liping ; Bergen, Sarah E. ; Akula, Nirmala ; Song, Jie ; Hultman, Christina M. ; Landén, Mikael ; Adli, Mazda ; Alda, Martin ; Ardau, Raffaella ; Arias, Bárbara ; Aubry, Jean-Michel ; Backlund, Lena ; Badner, Judith A. ; Barrett, Thomas B. ; Bauer, Michael ; Baune, Bernhard T. ; Bellivier, Frank ; Benabarre Hernandez, Antonio ; Bengesser, Susanne ; Berrettini, Wade H. ; Bhattacharjee, Abesh Kumar ; Biernacka, Joanna M. ; Birner, Armin ; Bloss, Cinnamon S. ; Brichant-Petitjean, Clara ; Bui, Elise T. ; Byerley, William ; Cervantes, Pablo ; Chillotti, Caterina ; Cichon, Sven ; Colom, Francesc ; Coryell, William ; Craig, David W. ; Cruceanu, Cristiana ; Czerski, Piotr M. ; Davis, Tony ; Dayer, Alexandre ; Degenhardt, Franziska ; Del Zompo, Maria ; DePaulo, J. Raymond ; Edenberg, Howard J. ; Étain, Bruno ; Falkai, Peter ; Foroud, Tatiana ; Forstner, Andreas Josef ; Frisén, Louise ; Frye, Mark A. ; Fullerton, Janice M. ; Gard, Sébastien ; Garnham, Julie S. ; Gershon, Elliot S. ; Goes, Fernando S. ; Greenwood, Tiffany A. ; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria ; Hauser, Joanna ; Heilbronner, Urs ; Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie ; Herms, Stefan ; Hipolito, Maria ; Hitturlingappa, Shashi ; Hoffmann, Per ; Hofmann, Andrea ; Jamain, Stephane ; Jiménez, Esther ; Kahn, Jean-Pierre ; Kassem, Layla ; Kelsoe, John R. ; Kittel-Schneider, Sarah ; Kliwicki, Sebastian ; Koller, Daniel L. ; König, Barbara ; Lackner, Nina ; Laje, Gonzalo ; Lang, Maren ; Lavebratt, Catharina ; Lawson, William B. ; Leboyer, Marion ; Leckband, Susan G. ; Liu, Chunyu ; Maaser, Anna ; Mahon, Pamela B. ; Maier, Wolfgang ; Maj, Mario ; Manchia, Mirko ; Martinsson, Lina ; McCarthy, Michael J. ; McElroy, Susan L. ; McInnis, Melvin G. ; McKinney, Rebecca ; Mitchell, Philip B. ; Mitjans, Marina ; Mondimore, Francis M. ; Monteleone, Palmiero ; Mühleisen, Thomas W. ; Nievergelt, Caroline M. ; Nöthen, Markus Maria ; Novák, Tomas ; Nurnberger, John I. ; Nwulia, Evaristus A. ; Ösby, Urban ; Pfennig, Andrea ; Potash, James B. ; Propping, Peter ; Reif, Andreas ; Reininghaus, Eva ; Rice, John ; Rietschel, Marcella ; Rouleau, Guy A. ; Rybakowski, Janusz K. ; Schalling, Martin ; Scheftner, William A. ; Schofield, Peter R. ; Schork, Nicholas J. ; Schulze, Thomas G. ; Schumacher, Johannes ; Schweizer, Barbara W. ; Severino, Giovanni ; Shekhtman, Tatyana ; Shilling, Paul D. ; Simhandl, Christian ; Slaney, Claire M. ; Smith, Erin N. ; Squassina, Alessio ; Stamm, Thomas ; Stopkova, Pavla ; Streit, Fabian ; Strohmaier, Jana ; Szelinger, Szabolcs ; Tighe, Sarah K. ; Tortorella, Alfonso ; Turecki, Gustavo ; Vieta, Eduard ; Volkert, Julia ; Witt, Stephanie H. ; Wright, Adam ; Zandi, Peter P. ; Zhang, Peng ; Zollner, Sebastian ; McMahon, Francis J.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a genetically complex mental illness characterized by severe oscillations of mood and behavior. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several risk loci that together account for a small portion of the heritability. To identify additional risk loci, we performed a two-stage meta-analysis of >9 million genetic variants in 9,784 bipolar disorder patients and 30,471 controls, the largest GWAS of BD to date. In this study, to increase power we used ~2,000 lithium-treated cases with a long-term diagnosis of BD from the Consortium on Lithium Genetics, excess controls, and analytic methods optimized for markers on the Xchromosome. In addition to four known loci, results revealed genome-wide significant associations at two novel loci: an intergenic region on 9p21.3 (rs12553324, p = 5.87×10-9; odds ratio = 1.12) and markers within ERBB2 (rs2517959, p = 4.53×10-9; odds ratio = 1.13). No significant X-chromosome associations were detected and X-linked markers explained very little BD heritability. The results add to a growing list of common autosomal variants involved in BD and illustrate the power of comparing well-characterized cases to an excess of controls in GWAS.
Identification of shared risk loci and pathways for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia (2017)
Forstner, Andreas Josef ; Hecker, Julian ; Hofmann, Andrea ; Maaser, Anna ; Reinbold, Céline S. ; Mühleisen, Thomas W. ; Leber, Markus ; Strohmaier, Jana ; Degenhardt, Franziska ; Treutlein, Jens ; Mattheisen, Manuel ; Schumacher, Johannes ; Streit, Fabian ; Meier, Sandra ; Herms, Stefan ; Hoffmann, Per ; Lacour, André ; Witt, Stephanie ; Reif, Andreas ; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram ; Lucae, Susanne ; Maier, Wolfgang ; Schwarz, Markus ; Vedder, Helmut ; Kammerer-Ciernioch, Jutta ; Pfennig, Andrea ; Bauer, Michael ; Hautzinger, Martin ; Moebus, Susanne ; Schenk, Lorena M. ; Fischer, Sascha B. ; Sivalingam, Sugirthan ; Czerski, Piotr M. ; Hauser, Joanna ; Lissowska, Jolanta ; Szeszenia-Dabrowska, Neonila ; Brennan, Paul E. ; McKay, James D. ; Wright, Adam ; Mitchell, Philip B. ; Fullerton, Janice M. ; Schofield, Peter R. ; Montgomery, Grant W. ; Medland, Sarah E. ; Gordon, Scott D. ; Martin, Nicholas Gordon ; Krasnov, Valery ; Chuchalin, Alexander ; Babadjanova, Gulja ; Pantelejeva, Galina ; Abramova, Lilia I. ; Tiganov, Alexander S. ; Polonikov, Alexey ; Khusnutdinova, Elza ; Alda, Martin ; Cruceanu, Cristiana ; Rouleau, Guy A. ; Turecki, Gustavo ; Laprise, Catherine ; Rivas, Fabio ; Mayoral, Fermı́n ; Kogevinas, Manolis ; Șerbanescu-Grigoroiu, Maria ; Becker, Tim ; Schulze, Thomas G. ; Rietschel, Marcella ; Cichon, Sven ; Fier, Heide ; Nöthen, Markus Maria
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a highly heritable neuropsychiatric disease characterized by recurrent episodes of mania and depression. BD shows substantial clinical and genetic overlap with other psychiatric disorders, in particular schizophrenia (SCZ). The genes underlying this etiological overlap remain largely unknown. A recent SCZ genome wide association study (GWAS) by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium identified 128 independent genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). The present study investigated whether these SCZ-associated SNPs also contribute to BD development through the performance of association testing in a large BD GWAS dataset (9747 patients, 14278 controls). After re-imputation and correction for sample overlap, 22 of 107 investigated SCZ SNPs showed nominal association with BD. The number of shared SCZ-BD SNPs was significantly higher than expected (p = 1.46x10-8). This provides further evidence that SCZ-associated loci contribute to the development of BD. Two SNPs remained significant after Bonferroni correction. The most strongly associated SNP was located near TRANK1, which is a reported genome-wide significant risk gene for BD. Pathway analyses for all shared SCZ-BD SNPs revealed 25 nominally enriched gene-sets, which showed partial overlap in terms of the underlying genes. The enriched gene-sets included calcium- and glutamate signaling, neuropathic pain signaling in dorsal horn neurons, and calmodulin binding. The present data provide further insights into shared risk loci and disease-associated pathways for BD and SCZ. This may suggest new research directions for the treatment and prevention of these two major psychiatric disorders.
Bioassays to monitor taspase1 function for the identification of pharmacogenetic inhibitors (2011)
Knauer, Shirley ; Fetz, Verena ; Rabenstein, Jens ; Friedl, Sandra ; Hofmann, Bettina ; Sabiani, Samaneh ; Schröder, Elisabeth ; Kunst, Lena ; Proschak, Ewgenij ; Thines, Eckhard ; Kindler, Thomas ; Schneider, Gisbert ; Marschalek, Rolf ; Stauber, Roland ; Bier, Carolin
Background: Threonine Aspartase 1 (Taspase1) mediates cleavage of the mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) protein and leukemia provoking MLL-fusions. In contrast to other proteases, the understanding of Taspase1's (patho)biological relevance and function is limited, since neither small molecule inhibitors nor cell based functional assays for Taspase1 are currently available. Methodology/Findings: Efficient cell-based assays to probe Taspase1 function in vivo are presented here. These are composed of glutathione S-transferase, autofluorescent protein variants, Taspase1 cleavage sites and rational combinations of nuclear import and export signals. The biosensors localize predominantly to the cytoplasm, whereas expression of biologically active Taspase1 but not of inactive Taspase1 mutants or of the protease Caspase3 triggers their proteolytic cleavage and nuclear accumulation. Compared to in vitro assays using recombinant components the in vivo assay was highly efficient. Employing an optimized nuclear translocation algorithm, the triple-color assay could be adapted to a high-throughput microscopy platform (Z'factor = 0.63). Automated high-content data analysis was used to screen a focused compound library, selected by an in silico pharmacophor screening approach, as well as a collection of fungal extracts. Screening identified two compounds, N-[2-[(4-amino-6-oxo-3H-pyrimidin-2-yl)sulfanyl]ethyl]benzenesulfonamideand 2-benzyltriazole-4,5-dicarboxylic acid, which partially inhibited Taspase1 cleavage in living cells. Additionally, the assay was exploited to probe endogenous Taspase1 in solid tumor cell models and to identify an improved consensus sequence for efficient Taspase1 cleavage. This allowed the in silico identification of novel putative Taspase1 targets. Those include the FERM Domain-Containing Protein 4B, the Tyrosine-Protein Phosphatase Zeta, and DNA Polymerase Zeta. Cleavage site recognition and proteolytic processing of these substrates were verified in the context of the biosensor. Conclusions: The assay not only allows to genetically probe Taspase1 structure function in vivo, but is also applicable for high-content screening to identify Taspase1 inhibitors. Such tools will provide novel insights into Taspase1's function and its potential therapeutic relevance.
Benefit of treatment individualization in patients with chronic hepatitis C receiving peginterferon alfa-2a and ribavirin in a large noninterventional cohort study (2015)
Hofmann, Wolf Peter ; Mauß, Stefan ; Lutz, Thomas ; Schober, Andreas ; Böker, Klaus ; Moog, Gero ; Baumgarten, Axel ; Pfeiffer-Vornkahl, Heike ; Alshuth, Ulrich ; Hüppe, Dietrich ; Wedemeyer, Heiner ; Manns, Michael P. ; Schott, Eckart
Background and aims: Individualization of treatment with peginterferon alfa and ribavirin in patients with chronic hepatitis C showed benefit in controlled trials and was implemented in treatment guidelines to increase response rates and to reduce side effects and costs. However, it is unknown whether individualization was adopted in routine daily practice and whether it translated into improved outcomes. Methods: From a large noninterventional cohort study, clinical and virologic response data of 10,262 HCV patients who received peginterferon alfa-2a and ribavirin between 2003-2007 and 2008-2011 were analyzed. To account for treatment individualization, a matched-pair analysis (2,997 matched pairs) was performed. Variation in treatment duration and dosing of ribavirin were analyzed as indicators for individualization. Results: Sustained virological response (SVR) rates were similar between 2003-2007 and 2008-2011 (62.0% vs. 63.7%). Patients with comorbidities were more abundant in the later period, (44.3% vs. 57.1%). The subsequent matched-pair analysis demonstrated higher SVR rates in the 2008-2011 period (64.3%) than in the 2003-2007 period (61.2%, p=0.008). More patients received abbreviated or extended treatment regimens in the later than the earlier period as an indicator of treatment individualization. To the same end, ribavirin doses were higher in the later period (12.6 versus 11.6 mg/kg/day). Factors independently associated with SVR included HCV genotype, low baseline viral load, younger age, route of infection, absence of concomitant diseases, lower APRI score, normal gamma-GT, higher ribavirin doses, no substitution for drug abuse, treatment duration, and treatment in the 2008-2011 period. Conclusions: Treatment individualization with peginterferon alfa and ribavirin was implemented in daily routine between 2003-2007 and 2008-2011, SVR rates improved in the same period. These findings may be most relevant in resource-limited settings.
Benjamin doubaliphotoelectron diffraction imaging of a molecular breakup using an x-ray free-electron laser (2020)
Kastirke, Gregor ; Schöffler, Markus S. ; Weller, Miriam ; Rist, Jonas ; Boll, Rebecca ; Anders, Nils ; Baumann, Thomas M. ; Eckart, Sebastian ; Erk, Benjamin ; De Fanis, Alberto ; Fehre, Kilian ; Gatton, Averell ; Grundmann, Sven Eric ; Grychtol, Patrik ; Hartung, Alexander ; Hofmann, Max ; Ilchen, Markus ; Janke, Christian ; Kircher, Max ; Kunitski, Maksim ; Li, Xiang ; Mazza, Tommaso ; Melzer, Niklas ; Montano, Jacobo ; Music, Valerija ; Nalin, Giammarco ; Ovcharenko, Yevheniy ; Pier, Andreas ; Rennhack, Nils ; Rivas, Daniel E. ; Dörner, Reinhard ; Rolles, Daniel ; Rudenko, Artem ; Schmidt, Philipp ; Siebert, Juliane ; Strenger, Nico ; Trabert, Daniel ; Vela-Perez, Isabel ; Wagner, Rene ; Weber, Thorsten ; Williams, Joshua B. ; Ziolkowski, Pawel ; Schmidt, Lothar ; Czasch, Achim ; Trinter, Florian ; Meyer, Michael ; Ueda, Kiyoshi ; Demekhin, Philipp V. ; Jahnke, Till
A central motivation for the development of x-ray free-electron lasers has been the prospect of time-resolved single-molecule imaging with atomic resolution. Here, we show that x-ray photoelectron diffraction—where a photoelectron emitted after x-ray absorption illuminates the molecular structure from within—can be used to image the increase of the internuclear distance during the x-ray-induced fragmentation of an O2 molecule. By measuring the molecular-frame photoelectron emission patterns for a two-photon sequential K-shell ionization in coincidence with the fragment ions, and by sorting the data as a function of the measured kinetic energy release, we can resolve the elongation of the molecular bond by approximately 1.2 a.u. within the duration of the x-ray pulse. The experiment paves the road toward time-resolved pump-probe photoelectron diffraction imaging at high-repetition-rate x-ray free-electron lasers.
Assessment of liver fibrosis and associated risk factors in HIV-infected individuals using transient elastography and serum biomarkers (2012)
Vermehren, Johannes ; Vermehren, Annika ; Mueller, Axel ; Carlebach, Amina ; Lutz, Thomas ; Gute, Peter ; Knecht, Gaby ; Sarrazin, Christoph ; Friedrich-Rust, Mireen ; Forestier, Nicole ; Poynard, Thierry ; Zeuzem, Stefan ; Herrmann, Eva ; Hofmann, Wolf-Peter
Background: Liver fibrosis in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals is mostly attributable to co-infection with hepatitis B or C. The impact of other risk factors, including prolonged exposure to combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) is poorly understood. Our aim was to determine the prevalence of liver fibrosis and associated risk factors in HIV-infected individuals based on non-invasive fibrosis assessment using transient elastography (TE) and serum biomarkers (Fibrotest [FT]). Methods: In 202 consecutive HIV-infected individuals (159 men; mean age 47 ± 9 years; 35 with hepatitis-C-virus [HCV] co-infection), TE and FT were performed. Repeat TE examinations were conducted 1 and 2 years after study inclusion. Results: Significant liver fibrosis was present in 16% and 29% of patients, respectively, when assessed by TE (≥ 7.1 kPa) and FT (> 0.48). A combination of TE and FT predicted significant fibrosis in 8% of all patients (31% in HIV/HCV co-infected and 3% in HIV mono-infected individuals). Chronic ALT, AST and γ-GT elevation was present in 29%, 20% and 51% of all cART-exposed patients and in 19%, 8% and 45.5% of HIV mono-infected individuals. Overall, factors independently associated with significant fibrosis as assessed by TE (OR, 95% CI) were co-infection with HCV (7.29, 1.95-27.34), chronic AST (6.58, 1.30-33.25) and γ-GT (5.17, 1.56-17.08) elevation and time on dideoxynucleoside therapy (1.01, 1.00-1.02). In 68 HIV mono-infected individuals who had repeat TE examinations, TE values did not differ significantly during a median follow-up time of 24 months (median intra-patient changes at last TE examination relative to baseline: -0.2 kPa, p = 0.20). Conclusions: Chronic elevation of liver enzymes was observed in up to 45.5% of HIV mono-infected patients on cART. However, only a small subset had significant fibrosis as predicted by TE and FT. There was no evidence for fibrosis progression during follow-up TE examinations.
Impact of global cooling on Early Cretaceous high pCO2 world during the Weissert Event (2021)
Cavalheiro, Liyenne ; Wagner, Thomas ; Steinig, Sebastian ; Bottini, Cinzia ; Dummann, Wolf ; Esegbue, Onoriode ; Gambacorta, Gabriele ; Giraldo-Gómez, Victor Manuel ; Farnsworth, Alexander ; Flögel, Sascha ; Hofmann, Peter ; Lunt, Daniel J. ; Rethemeyer, Janet ; Torricelli, Stefano ; Erba, Elisabetta
The Weissert Event ~133 million years ago marked a profound global cooling that punctuated the Early Cretaceous greenhouse. We present modelling, high-resolution bulk organic carbon isotopes and chronostratigraphically calibrated sea surface temperature (SSTs) based on an organic paleothermometer (the TEX86 proxy), which capture the Weissert Event in the semi-enclosed Weddell Sea basin, offshore Antarctica (paleolatitude ~54 °S; paleowater depth ~500 meters). We document a ~3–4 °C drop in SST coinciding with the Weissert cold end, and converge the Weddell Sea data, climate simulations and available worldwide multi-proxy based temperature data towards one unifying solution providing a best-fit between all lines of evidence. The outcome confirms a 3.0 °C ( ±1.7 °C) global mean surface cooling across the Weissert Event, which translates into a ~40% drop in atmospheric pCO2 over a period of ~700 thousand years. Consistent with geologic evidence, this pCO2 drop favoured the potential build-up of local polar ice.
Driving mechanisms of organic carbon burial in the Early Cretaceous South Atlantic Cape Basin (DSDP Site 361) (2021)
Dummann, Wolf ; Steinig, Sebastian ; Hofmann, Peter ; Lenz, Matthias ; Kusch, Stephanie ; Flögel, Sascha ; Herrle, Jens Olaf ; Hallmann, Christian ; Rethemeyer, Janet ; Kasper, Haino Uwe ; Wagner, Thomas
Extensive black shale deposits formed in the Early Cretaceous South Atlantic, supporting the notion that this emerging ocean basin was a globally important site of organic carbon burial. The magnitude of organic carbon burial in marine basins is known to be controlled by various tectonic, oceanographic, hydrological, and climatic processes acting on different temporal and spatial scales, the nature and relative importance of which are poorly understood for the young South Atlantic. Here we present new bulk and molecular geochemical data from an Aptian–Albian sediment record recovered from the deep Cape Basin at Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Site 361, which we combine with general circulation model results to identify driving mechanisms of organic carbon burial. A multimillion-year decrease (i.e., Early Aptian–Albian) in organic carbon burial, reflected in a lithological succession of black shale, gray shale, and red beds, was caused by increasing bottom water oxygenation due to abating hydrographic restriction via South Atlantic–Southern Ocean gateways. These results emphasize basin evolution and ocean gateway development as a decisive primary control on enhanced organic carbon preservation in the Cape Basin at geological timescales (> 1 Myr). The Early Aptian black shale sequence comprises alternations of shales with high (> 6 %) and relatively low (∼ 3.5 %) organic carbon content of marine sources, the former being deposited during the global Oceanic Anoxic Event (OAE) 1a, as well as during repetitive intervals before and after OAE 1a. In all cases, these short-term intervals of enhanced organic carbon burial coincided with strong influxes of sediments derived from the proximal African continent, indicating closely coupled climate–land–ocean interactions. Supported by our model results, we show that fluctuations in weathering-derived nutrient input from the southern African continent, linked to changes in orbitally driven humidity and aridity, were the underlying drivers of repetitive episodes of enhanced organic carbon burial in the deep Cape Basin. These results suggest that deep marine environments of emerging ocean basins responded sensitively and directly to short-term fluctuations in riverine nutrient fluxes. We explain this relationship using the lack of wide and mature continental shelf seas that could have acted as a barrier or filter for nutrient transfer from the continent into the deep ocean.
Portal vein thrombosis as complication of romiplostim treatment in a cirrhotic patient with hepatitis C-associated immune thrombocytopenic purpura (2011)
Dultz, Georg ; Kronenberger, Bernd ; Azizi, Alireza ; Mihm, Ulrike ; Vogl, Thomas J. ; Sarrazin, Ulrike ; Sarrazin, Christoph ; Zeuzem, Stefan ; Hofmann, Wolf-Peter
Background & Aims: Thrombopoietin receptor agonists are a new class of compounds licenced for the treatment of immune thrombocytopenic purpura. They are currently being studied for patients with thrombopenia in advanced liver disease or under therapy for hepatitis C. There are indications that the risk for development of portal vein thrombosis in patients with advanced liver cirrhosis might be increased under therapy with thrombopoietin receptor agonists. We report a case of a patient with Child class B liver cirrhosis with concurrent immune thrombocytopenic purpura that developed portal vein thrombosis under therapy with the thrombopoietin receptor agonist romiplostim. Methods: A 50-year-old woman with hepatitis C virus associated immune thrombocytopenic purpura and Child class B liver cirrhosis presented in our emergency with rapidly evolving hydropic decompensation and general malaise. For immune thrombocytopenic purpura, the patient was started on the thrombopoietin receptor agonist romiplostim nine months ago. Results: During hospitalization, the platelet count was measured above 330,000/μl and partial portal vein thrombosis was diagnosed by imaging studies. The thrombotic event was assumed to be associated with the romiplostim treatment for immune thrombocytopenic purpura via excessive elevation of platelet count. After anticoagulation with heparin and cessation of romiplostim treatment, complete recanalisation of the portal vein was achieved. Conclusions: We conclude that romiplostim should be used with precaution in patients with hepatitis C-associated immune thrombocytopenic purpura and advanced liver cirrhosis as the risk for thrombotic complications may increase significantly.
The MLL recombinome of acute leukemias in 2013 (2013)
Meyer, Claus ; Hofmann, J ; Burmeister, T ; Gröger, D ; Park, TS ; Emerenciano, M ; Pombo de Oliveira, M ; Renneville, A ; Macintyre, E ; Cavé, H ; Clappier, E ; Mass-Malo, K ; Zuna, J ; Trka, J ; De Braekeleer, E ; De Braekeleer, M ; Oh, SH ; Tsaur, G ; Fechina, L ; van der Velden, VH ; van Dongen, JJ ; Delabesse, E ; Binato, R ; Silva, ML ; Kustanovich, A ; Aleinikova, O ; Harris, MH ; Lund-Aho, T ; Juvonen, V ; Heidenreich, O ; Vormoor, J ; Choi, WW ; Jarosova, M ; Kolenova, A ; Bueno, C ; Menendez, P ; Wehner, S ; Eckert, C ; Talmant, P ; Tondeur, S ; Lippert, E ; Launay, E ; Henry, C ; Ballerini, P ; Lapillone, H ; Callanan, MB ; Cayuela, JM ; Herbaux, C ; Cazzaniga, G ; Kakadiya, PM ; Bohlander, Stefan Klaus ; Ahlmann, M ; Choi, JR ; Gameiro, P ; Lee, DS ; Krauter, J ; Cornillet-Lefebvre, P ; Te Kronnie, G ; Schäfer, BW ; Kubetzko, S ; Alonso, CN ; zur Stadt, U ; Sutton, R ; Venn, NC ; Izraeli, S ; Trakhtenbrot, L ; Madsen, HO ; Archer, P ; Hancock, J ; Cerveira, N ; Teixeira, MR ; Lo Nigro, L ; Möricke, A ; Stanulla, M ; Schrappe, M ; Sedék, L ; Szczepański, T ; Zwaan, CM ; Coenen, EA ; van den Heuvel-Eibrink, MM ; Strehl, S ; Dworzak, Michael N. ; Panzer-Grümayer, Renate ; Dingermann, Theodor ; Klingebiel, Thomas ; Marschalek, Rolf
Chromosomal rearrangements of the human MLL (mixed lineage leukemia) gene are associated with high-risk infant, pediatric, adult and therapy-induced acute leukemias. We used long-distance inverse-polymerase chain reaction to characterize the chromosomal rearrangement of individual acute leukemia patients. We present data of the molecular characterization of 1590 MLL-rearranged biopsy samples obtained from acute leukemia patients. The precise localization of genomic breakpoints within the MLL gene and the involved translocation partner genes (TPGs) were determined and novel TPGs identified. All patients were classified according to their gender (852 females and 745 males), age at diagnosis (558 infant, 416 pediatric and 616 adult leukemia patients) and other clinical criteria. Combined data of our study and recently published data revealed a total of 121 different MLL rearrangements, of which 79 TPGs are now characterized at the molecular level. However, only seven rearrangements seem to be predominantly associated with illegitimate recombinations of the MLL gene (~ 90%): AFF1/AF4, MLLT3/AF9, MLLT1/ENL, MLLT10/AF10, ELL, partial tandem duplications (MLL PTDs) and MLLT4/AF6, respectively. The MLL breakpoint distributions for all clinical relevant subtypes (gender, disease type, age at diagnosis, reciprocal, complex and therapy-induced translocations) are presented. Finally, we present the extending network of reciprocal MLL fusions deriving from complex rearrangements.
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