4.2 Article

Fusion of the HMGA2 and BNC2 Genes in Uterine Leiomyoma With t(9,12)(p22;q14)

Journal

IN VIVO
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 2654-2661

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/invivo.13000

Keywords

Uterine leiomyoma; chromosomal aberration; high mobility group Al-hook 2 (HMGA2) gene; fusion transcript

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This study reports a new t(9;12)(p22;q14) translocation resulting in the fusion of HMGA2 and BNC2 genes, further elucidating the relationship between genomic rearrangements of HMGA2 and tumorigenesis.
Background/Aim: The translocation t(9;12) (p22;q14 similar to 15) has been reported in lipomas, pleomorphic adenomas, a myolipoma, two chondroid luunartomas, and two uterine leiotnyotnas. In lipotnas and pleotnorphic adenomas, the translocation fuses HMGA2 (12q14) with the NFIB gene from 9p22; in myolipoma, it fuses HMGA2 with C9o1192 from 9p22; and in chondroid hamartomas, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) investigations showed the chromosomal aberration to cause intragenic rearrangement of HMGA2. The translocation's molecular consequence in a uterine leiomyoma is described here. Materials and Methods: A typical leiomyoma was investigated using banding cytogenetics, FISH, RNA sequencing, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction and Sanger sequencing. Results: A single translocation, t(9;12)(p22;q14) leading to an HMGA2::BNC2 chimera, was found in tumor cells. A sequence of the untranslated part of exon 5 of HMGA2 (nucleotide 1035 in the NCBI reference sequence NM_003483.4) had fused with a sequence from the untranslated part of exon 7 of BNC2 from 9p22 (nucleotide 9284 in reference sequence NM 017637.6). Conclusion: At the molecular level, the t(9;12)(p22;q14-15) found in several benign tumors appears to be heterogeneous fusing HMGA2 with either BNC2, C9otf92 or NFIB which all three map close to one another within a 3 Mbp region in 9p22. Because the fusion point in HMGA2 in the present tumor lays downstream from the first Let-7 miRNA consensus binding site, we conclude that deletion of the first Let-7 miRNA binding site is not important for the transcriptional upregulation of HMGA2 caused by the genomic rearrangement.

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