Prompt and accurate diagnosis of small round cell tumors warrants ancillary studies. Recently, two-color fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) using probes for specific gene rearrangements has gained wide acceptance. EWS gene rearrangements, present in essentially 100% of Ewing's Sarcoma/peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor, were evaluated by FISH on frozen sections (FS) of tumor biopsies from 10 patients, plus a negative control, and in seven other malignant neoplasms of childhood. 4mu FS were hybridized overnight, using a single EWS gene-specific probe spanning the EWS breakpoint. We identified EWS rearrangements in 8 of 10 cases (80%) of Ewing's Sarcoma/pPNET. There are no known false positives in diploid or near-diploid tumors, or in any of the non-EWS tumors tested; the uncommon false negative can be confirmed by RT-PCR. Hyperdiploid cases with multiple copies of chromosome 22 may be better evaluated by two-color FISH. This is the first use on FS biopsy material of a single probe for EWS, capable of detecting all known EWS rearrangements, in ES and other tumors. Utilization of this ancillary technique on FS for ES/pPNET and other tumors with distinctive chromosomal translocation is highly specific, reliable, expeditious (24-36 hours) and cost-effective.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000478-199903000-00010 | DOI Listing |
New Phytol
January 2025
Faculty of Biology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 82152, Martinsried, Germany.
Plants are master chemists and collectively are able to produce hundreds of thousands of different organic compounds. The genes underlying the biosynthesis of many specialized metabolites are organized in biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs), which is hypothesized to ensure their faithful coinheritance and to facilitate their coordinated expression. In rice (Oryza sativa), momilactones are diterpenoids that act in plant defence and various organismic interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Cancer
January 2025
DGHO, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Hämatologie und Medizinische Onkologie e.V. working group, Clinical and Translational Epigenetics, Berlin, Germany.
Chromosomal rearrangements involving the Mixed Lineage Leukemia gene (MLL1, KMT2A) are defining a genetically distinct subset in about 10% of human acute leukemias. Translocations involving the KMT2A-locus at chromosome 11q23 are resulting in the formation of a chimeric oncogene, where the N-terminal part of KMT2A is fused to a variety of translocation partners. The most frequently found fusion partners of KMT2A in acute leukemia are the C-terminal parts of AFF1, MLLT3, MLLT1 and MLLT10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Genomics
January 2025
Illumina Cambridge Ltd., Granta Park, Great Abington, Cambridge, UK.
Rearrangements involving the DUX4 gene (DUX4-r) define a subtype of paediatric and adult acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) with a favourable outcome. Currently, there is no 'standard of care' diagnostic method for their confident identification. Here, we present an open-source software tool designed to detect DUX4-r from short-read, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
January 2025
Department of Genetics, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Large genome rearrangements in mammalian cells can be generated at scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe lack tools to edit DNA sequences at scales necessary to study 99% of the human genome that is noncoding. To address this gap, we applied CRISPR prime editing to insert recombination handles into repetitive sequences, up to 1697 per cell line, which enables generating large-scale deletions, inversions, translocations, and circular DNA. Recombinase induction produced more than 100 stochastic megabase-sized rearrangements in each cell.
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