4.4 Article

Differential gene expression in anaptastic lymphoma kinase-positive and anaplastic lymphoma kinase-negative anaplastic large cell lymphomas

Journal

HUMAN PATHOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 494-504

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO
DOI: 10.1016/j.humpath.2005.03.004

Keywords

ALCL; microarray analysis; ALK expression; cyclin D3

Categories

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [T32 GM007753] Funding Source: Medline

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Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is an aggressive large T- or null-cell lymphoma. Most ALCLs arising in children and young adults express a constitutively active receptor tyrosine kinase, anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK). Anaplastic large cell lymphomas lacking ALK are clinically heterogeneous and their pathogenesis is unknown. This study is the first complementary DNA (cDNA) microarray analysis using RNA extracted from tumor tissue (7 ALK+ ALCLs and 7 ALK- ALCLs) to identify genes differentially expressed or shared between the ALK+ and ALK- tumors. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering using the top 11 most statistically significant discriminator cDNAs correctly grouped all ALK+ and ALK- tumors. Hierarchical clustering analysis using the 44 cDNAs with the greatest differential expression between ALK+ and ALK- RNAs grouped 6 of 7 ALK+ ALCLs together and I ALK+ ALCL with the ALK- group. In general, ALK+ tumors overexpress genes encoding signal transduction molecules (SYK, LYN, CDC37) and underexpress transcription factor genes (including HOXC6 and HOXA3) compared with the ALK- group. Cyclin D3 was overexpressed in the ALK+ group and the cell cycle inhibitor p19INK4D was decreased in the ALK- group, suggesting different mechanisms of promoting G(1)/S transition. Both groups had similar proliferation rates. Genes highly expressed in both ALK- and ALK+ ALCLs included kinases (LCK, protein kinase C, vav2, and NKIAMRE) and antiapoptotic molecules, suggesting possible common pathogenetic mechanisms as well. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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