Chromosomal aberrations occur in both B-CLL and T-CLL. The polyclonal B-cell mitogens, in particular Epstein-Barr virus and lipopolysaccharide from E. coli, have been used successfully to reveal chromosomal abnormalities in 40-60% of patients with B-CLL, while T-cell mitogens have shown chromosomal aberrations in T-CLL. The most common clonal chromosomal aberration in B-CLL is an extra chromosome 12, alone or together with other abnormalities. Other common aberrations are 14q+, structural aberrations on 6, 11, 12 and 13. Proto-oncogenes are frequently located close to breakpoints. The proto-oncogene c-K-ras is located on chromosome 12 and an abnormal transcript has recently been implicated in a subset of B-CLL-patients. An extra chromosome 12 as well as multiple chromosomal abnormalities in B-CLL appear to predict a less favourable prognosis. T-CLL is in most patients characterized by an inv(14), an extra 8q and structural abnormalities in chromosome 7. The genes for the specific T-cell receptor as well as the immunoglobulin heavy chain are located on these chromosomes. Chromosomal aberrations appear to have pathogenetic importance in both B-CLL and T-CLL.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0268-960x(87)90034-8DOI Listing

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