4.6 Article

Preferential occurrence of chromosome breakpoints within early replicating regions in neuroblastoma

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 4, Issue 12, Pages 1842-1846

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/cc.4.12.2257

Keywords

neuroblastoma; replication timing; translocations breakpoints; genomic microarrays

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Neuroblastoma ( NB) is a frequent paediatric extra cranial solid tumor characterized by the occurrence of unbalanced chromosome translocations, frequently, but not exclusively, involving chromosomes 1 and 17. We have used a 1 Mb resolution BAC array to further refine the mapping of breakpoints in NB cell lines. Replication timing profiles were evaluated in 7 NB cell lines, using DNAs from G(1) and S phases flow sorted nuclei hybridised on the same array. Strikingly, these replication timing profiles were highly similar between the different NB cell lines. Furthermore, a significant level of similarity was also observed between NB cell lines and lymphoblastoid cells. A segmentation analysis using the Adaptative Weights Smoothing procedure was performed to determine regions of coordinate replication. More than 50% of the breakpoints mapped to early replicating regions, which account for 23.7% of the total genome. The breakpoints frequency per 108 bases was therefore 10.84 for early replicating regions, whereas it was only 2.94 for late replicating regions, these difference being highly significant ( p < 10(-4)). This strong association was also observed when chromosomes 1 and 17, the two most frequent translocation partners in NB were excluded from the statistical analysis. These results unambiguously establish a link between unbalanced translocations, whose most likely mechanism of occurrence relies on break-induced replication, and early replication of the genome.

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