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Elsevier, Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 2(42), p. 191-201, 1989

DOI: 10.1016/0165-4608(89)90087-3

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Cytogenetic and molecular studies in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia and variant Philadelphia translocations.

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Out of 105 Philadelphia (Ph) positive chronic myeloid leukemia patients analyzed, six (5.7%) carried a variant Ph translocation, namely t(6;9;9;10;22)(q24;p13;q34;p15;q11); t(9;13;22)(q34;q21;q11);der(2)(2pter --- 2q31::9q21 --- 9q34::22q11 --- 22qter) and der(9)t(2;9) (9pter --- 9q21::2q31 --- 2qter);t(7;9;22)(q11;q34 ;q11), 14q + ;t(7;9;22)(q35;q34;q11), and t(9;11;22) (q34;q13;q11), respectively. Five of these patients were analyzed with Southern blotting. Three of them showed an atypical molecular pattern; namely, the patient with t(9;13;22) showed no rearrangement in the breakpoint cluster region (bcr), the patient with t(7;9;22)(q35;q34;q11) showed a 3' deletion, and the patient with t(7;9;22), 14q + showed a bcr rearrangement 3' to the exon 4 of the M-BCR. Chromosome in situ hybridization studies demonstrated that in patient one, a two-step translocation occurred: the first step moved the 3' bcr from chromosome 22 to chromosome 9, and the second moved the terminal part of 22q, carrying the c-sis protooncogene, to 10p. Variant Ph translocations appear to be associated with atypical molecular breakpoints.