Detection of the NPM-ALK genomic rearrangement of Ki-1 lymphoma and isolation of the involved NPM and ALK introns Journal Article


Authors: Ladanyi, M.; Cavalchire, G.
Article Title: Detection of the NPM-ALK genomic rearrangement of Ki-1 lymphoma and isolation of the involved NPM and ALK introns
Abstract: The breakpoints of the translocation t(2;5)(p23;q35) associated with Ki-1-positive anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (Ki-1 ALCL) involve a novel tyrosine kinase gene, ALK, at 2p23 and the nucleophosmin gene, NPM, at 5q35. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using NPM and ALK primers detects a consistent fusion product in Ki-1 ALCL cases with the translocation, resulting from genomic breakpoints within the same respective introns of NPM and ALK. To examine the feasibility of long-range DNA PCR with the same exonic NPM and ALK primers for the detection of the genomic NPM-ALK rearrangement, we examined 20 cases of Ki-1 ALCL previously characterized by NPM-ALK RT-PCR. Ten cases were positive for the NPM-ALK fusion RNA and 10 were negative. We first confirmed that both the NPM and ALK normal introns are relatively short, approximately 1 and 2 kb, respectively, suggesting that the largest possible size for the chimeric NPM-ALK intron would be about 3 kb. All 10 cases positive by RT-PCR were also positive by long-range DNA PCR. The DNA PCR products ranged, as expected, from the sizes of the normal introns, between 0.5 and 2.5 kb. All 10 RT-PCR-negative cases were also negative by long-range DNA PCR, and control templates for RT-PCR and long-range DNA PCR were successfully amplified. Thus, we have shown that the introns involved by the NPM-ALK rearrangement seen in some Ki-1 lymphomas are relatively short, making the genomic rearrangement amenable to reliable detection by long-range DNA PCR. Furthermore, the variability observed in the sizes of chimeric introns is evidence against clustering of the genomic breakpoints within these introns.
Keywords: human tissue; exon; polymerase chain reaction; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; gene amplification; intron; introns; protein tyrosine kinase; nuclear proteins; gene rearrangement; translocation, genetic; protein-tyrosine kinases; large cell lymphoma; dna determination; anaplastic carcinoma; nucleophosmin; lymphoma, large-cell, ki-1; alk gene; humans; human; priority journal; article; ki-1 lymphoma; npm gene; nucleolus organizer region
Journal Title: Diagnostic Molecular Pathology
Volume: 5
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1052-9551
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 1996-09-01
Start Page: 154
End Page: 158
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/00019606-199609000-00002
PUBMED: 8866227
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 22 November 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Marc Ladanyi
    1326 Ladanyi