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Identification of candidate tumor‐suppressor genes in 6q27 by combined deletion mapping and electronic expression profiling in lymphoid neoplasms
Author(s) -
Steinemann Doris,
Gesk Stefan,
Zhang Yanming,
Harder Lana,
Pilarsky Christian,
Hinzmann Bernd,
MartinSubero Jose Ignacio,
Calasanz Maria Jose,
Mungall Andrew,
Rosenthal André,
Siebert Reiner,
Schlegelberger Brigitte
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
genes, chromosomes and cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.754
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1098-2264
pISSN - 1045-2257
DOI - 10.1002/gcc.10231
Subject(s) - biology , contig , locus (genetics) , genetics , gene , fluorescence in situ hybridization , yeast artificial chromosome , breakpoint , chromosome , gene mapping , microbiology and biotechnology , genome
Deletions in the long arm of chromosome 6 (6q) are among the most frequent chromosome aberrations in lymphoid neoplasms. Recently, the region of minimal deletion (RMD1) in 6q27 was narrowed down to 5–9 Mb. In the present study, we aimed to define the distal border of the commonly lost region in 6q27 more precisely and to identify and investigate tumor‐suppressor genes (TSGs) from this region. Twenty‐nine cases, in which our previous fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) screening that used a set of 36 YAC probes revealed loss in 6q25–27, were further investigated by means of FISH. In all cases, deletions of 6q27 extended from yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) 977e10 spanning the proximal border of RMD1 to the most telomeric YAC 933f7 within the recently established YAC‐contig of this region. An interstitial homozygous deletion, flanked by the telomeric probe TelVysion6q and YAC 971g12, was detected, which substantially narrows down the RMD1. To identify candidate TSGs down‐regulated in malignant lymphomas from this region of homozygous loss, we performed electronic profiling of expressed sequences mapped to this region. This analysis suggested the gene PDCD2 originally thought to be involved in programmed cell death to be probably down‐regulated in malignant B‐cell lymphomas compared to normal B lymphocytes. Nevertheless, mutation analyses failed to identify mutations in the coding region of PDCD2 in nine lymphomas with FISH‐proved 6q27 deletions. Furthermore, epigenetic studies in these nine and an additional 48 lymphomas did not show altered methylation of the PDCD2 locus in these tumors. Possibly haploinsufficiency is effectual in accelerating tumor progression. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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