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Blood, Vol. 95 No. 8 (April 15), 2000:
pp. 2722-2724
BRIEF REPORT
From the Children's Cancer Research Institute (CCRI), St. Anna
Kinderspital, Vienna; the Clinic for Blood Group Serology, University
of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; and the Chair of Genetics, University of
Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany.
There is strong evidence that infant leukemias with a t(4;11)
translocation originate in utero. To test whether other subtypes of
childhood leukemias are also initiated during fetal life, we used
clone-specific genetic markers for the analysis of neonatal blood spots
from 5 children aged 6 months to 4 years 8 months at diagnosis of
pro-B, common acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and T-ALL. In all
children, the clonotypic antigen receptor gene rearrangements were
already present at birth. The estimated amount of clonotypic cells was
in the range of 10 to 100 cells per blood spot. In 2 infants with a
t(4;11) positive ALL, we detected similar amounts of the fusion gene
sequences compared with the clonal antigen receptor gene
rearrangements, suggesting the presence of both markers in the same
cells. Our data indicate that the first leukemogenic event of diverse
types of childhood ALL may already occur in utero.
(Blood. 2000;95:2722-2724)
Childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a
biologically heterogeneous disease. B-cell precursor (BCP) ALL is the
most common type of childhood ALL, with a peak incidence between 2 to 5 years of age.1 A small biologically different subgroup of
these BCP ALL has a t(4;11) translocation and occurs most frequently in
infancy.2 ALLs with a T-cell immunophenotype account for only 15% of ALLs and occur most often in older children.3
There is good evidence that at least some of these childhood leukemias originate in utero: children who develop B-lineage leukemias within the
first 3 years of life have fetal type DJ rearrangements of the
immunoglobulin heavy (IgH) chain genes, implying an in utero transforming event.4-6 Furthermore, an identical
leukemia-specific translocation and/or an identical clonotypic antigen
receptor gene rearrangement have been demonstrated in monozygotic twins with ALL.7-12 The proof for the prenatal origin of pro-B
ALL with a t(4;11) translocation comes from the detection of MLL/AF4
gene fusions in the neonatal blood spots from 3 children.13
The analysis of leukemia-specific fusion gene sequences is not
applicable to determine most other kinds of leukemias, because only a
third of all childhood ALLs have detectable chromosomal
translocations,14 and methods for their investigation are
intricate and therefore difficult to establish. The examination of
clone-specific antigen receptor gene rearrangements is widely used for
studies of clonality and the detection of minimal residual disease, and
can be applied in most childhood ALL to investigate the evolution of
preleukemic/leukemic clones.15
We therefore screened neonatal blood spots from 5 children with B- and
T-lineage (T) ALL for the presence of clone-specific antigen receptor
gene rearrangements.
Patients
Determination of leukemia clone-specific immunoglobulin heavy chain
and T-cell receptor
Polymerase chain reaction with DNA from Guthrie spots
The sequence of the clone-specific junctional region of the IgH and of the TCRG rearrangements was used to develop an ASO-PCR for their detection at low frequency (Table 1). By this approach, the clonotypic rearrangements were detected in the neonatal blood spots from all 5 patients (Figure 1). In addition to the clone-specific IgH rearrangements, we detected the leukemia-specific MLL-AF4 and the AF4-MLL fusion sequences in the Guthrie cards from the 2 infants with a t(4;11) positive leukemia (Figure 1). This observation is in line with a previous report by Gale et al,13 demonstrating that the MLL-AF4 rearrangements were present in the neonatal blood spots from three 6-month- to 2-year-old children. We estimated that about 10 clonotypic cells were present per Guthrie spots from patients 1, 3, and 5, and about 100 cells from patients 2 and 4. These numbers of preleukemic/leukemic cells are within the range reported by Gale et al.13 Of note, the estimated number of clonotypic cells as defined by the IgH rearrangements correspond to that as defined by the MLL-AF4/AF4-MLL fusion regions in patients 1 and 2. The similar quantity of the clonal cells suggests that the clonal IgH cells carried also the t(4;11) translocation.
We would like to thank Dr Shai Israeli (NCI) for fruitful discussions. We would also like to thank Dr S. Stöckler-Ipsiroglu from the University of Vienna, for providing the Guthrie cards.
Submitted November 1, 1999; accepted December 20, 1999.
This work was supported in part by the Österreichische Kinderkrebshilfe and by private donations to the CCRI.
Reprint: E. Renate Panzer-Grümayer, CCRI, St. Anna Kinderspital, Kinderspitalg 6, A-1090 Vienna, Austria; e-mail: panzer{at}ccri.univie.ac.at.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
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