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Title: Continuing immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements in chronic myeloid leukemia with recurrent B-lymphoid blast crises after bone marrow transplantation. Author: Kiyoi H, Fukutani H, Yamauchi T, Kubo K, Ohno R, Yamamori S, Naoe T. Journal: Leukemia; 1995 Feb; 9(2):265-70. PubMed ID: 7869762. Abstract: We sequentially analyzed the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable (IgH V) region gene of leukemia cells obtained from a chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patient who had three episodes of B-lymphoid crisis after bone marrow transplantation. Southern blot analysis using the JH probe showed different rearranged bands at each crisis, although the same rearranged bands of the BCR gene were observed. We amplified and sequenced the IgH V region gene of the leukemia cells by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using the primers corresponding to the consensus 5'VH and mu constant regions. The dominant leukemia clone at each crisis had a unique VH-D-JH rearrangement; VH4A (V79)-DLR2-J5 (clone-1), VH4B (DP70)-DK4-J6 (clone-2) and VH4A (V79)-DN4-J6 (clone-3) at the first, second and third crises, respectively. Further analysis by PCR amplification using the consensus 5'VH and clone-specific primers revealed that clone-1 underwent VH4-->VH3 replacement at the second crisis, and that clone-3 was already in existence at the first crisis. Moreover, the DN4-J6 joining clone, in which the sequence was the same as that of clone-3, was identified at the first and third crises by PCR amplification using primers corresponding to the region upstream of the DN4 segment and DN4-J6 boundary of clone-3. These observations suggest that multiple clones were generated from the progenitor cells of blast crisis, which were transformed at a very early stage of B-lymphocyte ontogeny, by continuing rearrangement mechanisms of the IgH genes, and that the dominant clone at each crisis was undergoing change.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]