Interphase cytogenetic analysis of clonality in peripheral blood cells from a patient with Down syndrome and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia.

Journal: Cancer Genetics And Cytogenetics
Published:
Abstract

A combination of fluorescence-activated cell sorting and interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) techniques was used to detect a clonal chromosomal marker in blasts, granulocytes, and T and B lymphocytes of the peripheral blood from a patient with Down syndrome and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL) associated with trisomy 8 as a karyotypic abnormality. Immunophenotypic studies with flow cytometry showed two populations of leukemic blasts distinguished by their expression of the CD34 antigen. Interphase FISH studies revealed clonal trisomy 8 FISH signals in almost all blast cells, regardless of CD34 expression, as well as in a small subpopulation of granulocytes. Normal chromosome 8 signal patterns were detected in T and B cells and in a great majority of granulocytes. The present study provides evidence for the clonal involvement of leukemic blasts in AMKL of Down syndrome, indicating that a trisomy 8 abnormality may be a primary event in leukemogenesis. The transformation occurs in progenitor cells with limited myeloid differentiation and without involvement of lymphoid lineage cells.

Authors
Hong Chang, Dan Li, Rakash Nayar, Charles Ye, Wendy Lau, D Sutherland