Cancers (Nov 2023)

Ring Chromosomes in Hematological Malignancies Are Associated with <i>TP53</i> Gene Mutations and Characteristic Copy Number Variants

  • Rachel J. Boyd,
  • Jaclyn B. Murry,
  • Laura A. Morsberger,
  • Melanie Klausner,
  • Suping Chen,
  • Christopher D. Gocke,
  • Andrew S. McCallion,
  • Ying S. Zou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15225439
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 22
p. 5439

Abstract

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Ring chromosomes (RC) are present in 13,000 patients diagnosed with hematological malignancies at the Johns Hopkins University Hospital and identified 98 patients with RCs—90 with myeloid malignancies and 8 with lymphoid malignancies. We also performed a targeted Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) assay, using a panel of 642 cancer genes, to identify whether these patients harbor relevant pathogenic variants. Cytogenetic analyses revealed that RCs and marker chromosomes of unknown origin are concurrently present in most patients by karyotyping, and 93% of patients with NGS data have complex karyotypes. A total of 72% of these individuals have pathogenic mutations in TP53, most of whom also possess cytogenetic abnormalities resulting in the loss of 17p, including the loss of TP53. All patients with a detected RC and without complex karyotypes also lack TP53 mutations but have pathogenic mutations in TET2. Further, 70% of RCs that map to a known chromosome are detected in individuals without TP53 mutations. Our data suggest that RCs in hematological malignancies may arise through different mechanisms, but ultimately promote widespread chromosomal instability.

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