Molecular studies reveal MLL-MLLT10/AF10 and ARID5B-MLL gene fusions displaced in a case of infantile acute lymphoblastic leukemia with complex karyotype

Oncol Lett. 2017 Aug;14(2):2295-2299. doi: 10.3892/ol.2017.6430. Epub 2017 Jun 20.

Abstract

The present report describes a unique infantile acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) case with cryptic mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) rearrangements with 11q23 chromosomal translocation. MLL break-apart signals were identified by fluorescence in situ hybridization, and transcriptome sequencing revealed MLL-myeloid/lymphoid or mixed-lineage leukemia; translocated To, 10 (MLLT10)/AF10 fusion transcripts. Analysis also revealed a previously unreported MLLT10/AF10-homeobox protein Mohawk (MKX) transcript, where the 5' portion of MLLT10/AF10 at 10p12.31 was fused out-of-frame with the 3' portion of MKX at 10p12.1, which is closely located to MLLT10/AF10. Furthermore, the reciprocal 3'-MLL gene segment was fused in-frame to AT-rich interaction domain (ARID)5B at 10q21. Previously, common allelic variants in ARID5B, which are directly associated with hematopoietic differentiation and development, have been repeatedly and significantly associated with childhood ALL. The heterozygous genotype in ARID5B (RefSNP: rs10821936) increased the risk for leukemia with MLL-rearrangement. In particular, single nucleotide polymorphisms of ARID5B conferred increased risk for MLL-MLLT3/AF9. Based on these findings, the authors propose that while the presence of reciprocal MLL alleles has been detected in this patient, different pathological disease mechanisms may be at play due to individual recombination events.

Keywords: ARID5B; MLL-MLLT10/AF10; acute lymphoblastic leukemia; molecular biology; transcriptome sequencing.