14 research outputs found

    A novel germline mutation in GP1BA gene N-terminal domain in monoallelic Bernard-Soulier syndrome

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    Mutations in the GP1BA gene have been associated with platelet-type von Willebrand disease and Bernard-Soulier syndrome. Here, we report a novel GP1BA mutation in a family with autosomal dominant macrothrombocytopenia and mild bleeding. We performed analyses of seven family members. Using whole-exome sequencing of germline DNA samples, we identified a heterozygous single-nucleotide change in GP1BA (exone2:c.176T>G), encoding a p.Leu59Arg substitution in the N-terminal domain, segregating with macrothrombocytopenia. This variant has not been previously reported. We also analysed the structure of the detected sequence variant in silico. In particular, we used the crystal structure of the human platelet receptor GP Ibα N-terminal domain. Replacement of aliphatic amino-acid Leu 59 with charged, polar and larger arginine probably disrupts the protein structure. An autosomal dominant mode of inheritance, a family history of mild bleeding episodes, aggregation pattern in affected individuals together with evidence of mutation occurring in part of the GP1BA gene encoding the leucine-rich repeat region suggest a novel variant causing monoallelic Bernard-Soulier syndrome

    Consistent B Cell Receptor Immunoglobulin Features Between Siblings in Familial Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

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    Key processes in the onset and evolution of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) are thought to include chronic (antigenic) activation of mature B cells through the B cell receptor (BcR), signals from the microenvironment, and acquisition of genetic alterations. Here we describe three families in which two or more siblings were affected by CLL. We investigated whether there are immunogenetic similarities in the leukemia-specific immunoglobulin heavy (IGH) and light (IGL/IGK) chain gene rearrangements of the siblings in each family. Furthermore, we performed array analysis to study if similarities in CLL-associated chromosomal aberrations are present within each family and screened for somatic mutations using paired tumor/normal whole-genome sequencing (WGS). In two families a consistent IGHV gene mutational status (one IGHV-unmutated, one IGHV-mutated) was observed. Intriguingly, the third family with four affected siblings was characterized by usage of the lambda IGLV3-21 gene, with the hallmark R110 mutation of the recently described clinically aggressive IGLV3-21R110 subset. In this family, the CLL-specific rearrangements in two siblings could be assigned to either stereotyped subset #2 or the immunogenetically related subset #169, both of which belong to the broader IGLV3-21R110 subgroup. Consistent patterns of cytogenetic aberrations were encountered in all three families. Furthermore, the CLL clones carried somatic mutations previously associated with IGHV mutational status, cytogenetic aberrations and stereotyped subsets, respectively. From these findings, we conclude that similarities in immunogenetic characteristics in familial CLL, in combination with genetic aberrations acquired, point towards shared underlying mechanisms behind CLL development within each family

    Table_2_Insights into IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL: frequency, mechanisms, associations, and diagnostic implications.xlsx

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    IntroductionThe malignant transformation leading to a maturation arrest in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) occurs early in B-cell development, in a pro-B or pre-B cell, when somatic recombination of variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) segment immunoglobulin (IG) genes and the B-cell rescue mechanism of VH replacement might be ongoing or fully active, driving clonal evolution. In this study of newly diagnosed BCP-ALL, we sought to understand the mechanistic details of oligoclonal composition of the leukemia at diagnosis, clonal evolution during follow-up, and clonal distribution in different hematopoietic compartments.MethodsUtilizing high-throughput sequencing assays and bespoke bioinformatics we identified BCP-ALL-derived clonally-related IGH sequences by their shared ‘DNJ-stem’.ResultsWe introduce the concept of ‘marker DNJ-stem’ to cover the entirety of, even lowly abundant, clonally-related family members. In a cohort of 280 adult patients with BCP-ALL, IGH clonal evolution at diagnosis was identified in one-third of patients. The phenomenon was linked to contemporaneous recombinant and editing activity driven by aberrant ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination and VH replacement, and we share insights and examples for both. Furthermore, in a subset of 167 patients with molecular subtype allocation, high prevalence and high degree of clonal evolution driven by ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination were associated with the presence of KMT2A gene rearrangements, while VH replacements occurred more frequently in Ph-like and DUX4 BCP-ALL. Analysis of 46 matched diagnostic bone marrow and peripheral blood samples showed a comparable clonal and clonotypic distribution in both hematopoietic compartments, but the clonotypic composition markedly changed in longitudinal follow-up analysis in select cases. Thus, finally, we present cases where the specific dynamics of clonal evolution have implications for both the initial marker identification and the MRD monitoring in follow-up samples.DiscussionConsequently, we suggest to follow the marker DNJ-stem (capturing all family members) rather than specific clonotypes as the MRD target, as well as to follow both VDJH and DJH family members since their respective kinetics are not always parallel. Our study further highlights the intricacy, importance, and present and future challenges of IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL.</p

    Table_3_Insights into IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL: frequency, mechanisms, associations, and diagnostic implications.xlsx

    No full text
    IntroductionThe malignant transformation leading to a maturation arrest in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) occurs early in B-cell development, in a pro-B or pre-B cell, when somatic recombination of variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) segment immunoglobulin (IG) genes and the B-cell rescue mechanism of VH replacement might be ongoing or fully active, driving clonal evolution. In this study of newly diagnosed BCP-ALL, we sought to understand the mechanistic details of oligoclonal composition of the leukemia at diagnosis, clonal evolution during follow-up, and clonal distribution in different hematopoietic compartments.MethodsUtilizing high-throughput sequencing assays and bespoke bioinformatics we identified BCP-ALL-derived clonally-related IGH sequences by their shared ‘DNJ-stem’.ResultsWe introduce the concept of ‘marker DNJ-stem’ to cover the entirety of, even lowly abundant, clonally-related family members. In a cohort of 280 adult patients with BCP-ALL, IGH clonal evolution at diagnosis was identified in one-third of patients. The phenomenon was linked to contemporaneous recombinant and editing activity driven by aberrant ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination and VH replacement, and we share insights and examples for both. Furthermore, in a subset of 167 patients with molecular subtype allocation, high prevalence and high degree of clonal evolution driven by ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination were associated with the presence of KMT2A gene rearrangements, while VH replacements occurred more frequently in Ph-like and DUX4 BCP-ALL. Analysis of 46 matched diagnostic bone marrow and peripheral blood samples showed a comparable clonal and clonotypic distribution in both hematopoietic compartments, but the clonotypic composition markedly changed in longitudinal follow-up analysis in select cases. Thus, finally, we present cases where the specific dynamics of clonal evolution have implications for both the initial marker identification and the MRD monitoring in follow-up samples.DiscussionConsequently, we suggest to follow the marker DNJ-stem (capturing all family members) rather than specific clonotypes as the MRD target, as well as to follow both VDJH and DJH family members since their respective kinetics are not always parallel. Our study further highlights the intricacy, importance, and present and future challenges of IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL.</p

    Table_1_Insights into IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL: frequency, mechanisms, associations, and diagnostic implications.xlsx

    No full text
    IntroductionThe malignant transformation leading to a maturation arrest in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) occurs early in B-cell development, in a pro-B or pre-B cell, when somatic recombination of variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) segment immunoglobulin (IG) genes and the B-cell rescue mechanism of VH replacement might be ongoing or fully active, driving clonal evolution. In this study of newly diagnosed BCP-ALL, we sought to understand the mechanistic details of oligoclonal composition of the leukemia at diagnosis, clonal evolution during follow-up, and clonal distribution in different hematopoietic compartments.MethodsUtilizing high-throughput sequencing assays and bespoke bioinformatics we identified BCP-ALL-derived clonally-related IGH sequences by their shared ‘DNJ-stem’.ResultsWe introduce the concept of ‘marker DNJ-stem’ to cover the entirety of, even lowly abundant, clonally-related family members. In a cohort of 280 adult patients with BCP-ALL, IGH clonal evolution at diagnosis was identified in one-third of patients. The phenomenon was linked to contemporaneous recombinant and editing activity driven by aberrant ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination and VH replacement, and we share insights and examples for both. Furthermore, in a subset of 167 patients with molecular subtype allocation, high prevalence and high degree of clonal evolution driven by ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination were associated with the presence of KMT2A gene rearrangements, while VH replacements occurred more frequently in Ph-like and DUX4 BCP-ALL. Analysis of 46 matched diagnostic bone marrow and peripheral blood samples showed a comparable clonal and clonotypic distribution in both hematopoietic compartments, but the clonotypic composition markedly changed in longitudinal follow-up analysis in select cases. Thus, finally, we present cases where the specific dynamics of clonal evolution have implications for both the initial marker identification and the MRD monitoring in follow-up samples.DiscussionConsequently, we suggest to follow the marker DNJ-stem (capturing all family members) rather than specific clonotypes as the MRD target, as well as to follow both VDJH and DJH family members since their respective kinetics are not always parallel. Our study further highlights the intricacy, importance, and present and future challenges of IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL.</p

    DataSheet_1_Insights into IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL: frequency, mechanisms, associations, and diagnostic implications.docx

    No full text
    IntroductionThe malignant transformation leading to a maturation arrest in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) occurs early in B-cell development, in a pro-B or pre-B cell, when somatic recombination of variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) segment immunoglobulin (IG) genes and the B-cell rescue mechanism of VH replacement might be ongoing or fully active, driving clonal evolution. In this study of newly diagnosed BCP-ALL, we sought to understand the mechanistic details of oligoclonal composition of the leukemia at diagnosis, clonal evolution during follow-up, and clonal distribution in different hematopoietic compartments.MethodsUtilizing high-throughput sequencing assays and bespoke bioinformatics we identified BCP-ALL-derived clonally-related IGH sequences by their shared ‘DNJ-stem’.ResultsWe introduce the concept of ‘marker DNJ-stem’ to cover the entirety of, even lowly abundant, clonally-related family members. In a cohort of 280 adult patients with BCP-ALL, IGH clonal evolution at diagnosis was identified in one-third of patients. The phenomenon was linked to contemporaneous recombinant and editing activity driven by aberrant ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination and VH replacement, and we share insights and examples for both. Furthermore, in a subset of 167 patients with molecular subtype allocation, high prevalence and high degree of clonal evolution driven by ongoing DH/VH-DJH recombination were associated with the presence of KMT2A gene rearrangements, while VH replacements occurred more frequently in Ph-like and DUX4 BCP-ALL. Analysis of 46 matched diagnostic bone marrow and peripheral blood samples showed a comparable clonal and clonotypic distribution in both hematopoietic compartments, but the clonotypic composition markedly changed in longitudinal follow-up analysis in select cases. Thus, finally, we present cases where the specific dynamics of clonal evolution have implications for both the initial marker identification and the MRD monitoring in follow-up samples.DiscussionConsequently, we suggest to follow the marker DNJ-stem (capturing all family members) rather than specific clonotypes as the MRD target, as well as to follow both VDJH and DJH family members since their respective kinetics are not always parallel. Our study further highlights the intricacy, importance, and present and future challenges of IGH clonal evolution in BCP-ALL.</p
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