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Possible imprinting and microchimerism in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and related lymphoproliferative disorders.
Author(s) -
Viggo Jønsson,
Geir E Tjønnfjord,
Tom B Johannesen,
Sven Ove Samuelsen,
Bernt Ly
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
translational oncogenomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.205
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 1177-2727
DOI - 10.4137/tog.s439
Based on the concept that the tumorogenesis in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia comprises both an initial, inherited mutation and subsequent somatic mutations, the pleiotypic diversity of familial chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and related malignant lymphoproliferative disorders is generally explained by a repertoire of monoallelic polygenes in the initial mutation. Epigenetic genomic imprinting is a likely mechanism behind of the asynchroneous replicating monoallelic polygenes which is discussed in the light of pleiotrophy and birth order effect. Furthermore, it is discussed that one possible mechanism available for the epigenetic transfer of these genes could be the physiological pregnancy-related microchimerism between mother and fetus.

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