Molecular diagnosis of synovial sarcoma and characterization of a variant SYT-SSX2 fusion transcript Journal Article


Authors: Fligman, I.; Lonardo, F.; Jhanwar, S. C.; Gerald, W. L.; Woodruff, J.; Ladanyi, M.
Article Title: Molecular diagnosis of synovial sarcoma and characterization of a variant SYT-SSX2 fusion transcript
Abstract: The translocation t(X:18)(p11;q11) is seen in >80% of synovial sarcomas (SS) with informative karyotypes. The breakpoints of the t(X;18) have been cloned and shown to involve two novel genes, SSX (at Xp11) and SYT (at 18q11), which produce a chimeric SYT-SSX transcript as a result of the translocation. Recently, SSX has been shown to be duplicated, with both copies, SSX1 and SSX2, located within distinct subregions of Xp11. We performed a reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay for both chimeric SYT-SSX transcripts in a series of 35 SS (29 monophasic, 6 biphasic) to assess its usefulness in molecular diagnosis and to evaluate the incidence of molecular variants. Of the 35 cases, 29 (83%) showed a specific SYT-SSX RT-PCR product, using a consensus primer for SSX1 and SSX2. Upon excluding three negative cases that bad poor quality RNA, the proportion of positives rose to 91% (29/32). The 29 positive cases were further studied using primers specific for either SSX1 or SSX2; 19 cases were positive for SYT-SSX1 and 10 for SYT-SSX2. The relationship of histological subtype (monophasic versus biphasic) to SSX1 or SSX2 involvement was not statistically significant. In a single histologically unremarkable monophasic SS, a slightly larger SYT-SSX2 RT-PCR product was observed. Sequencing of this novel variant showed a 129-bp segment inserted between the usual SYT and SSX2 fusion points, of which 126 bp were derived from a more proximal (5') portion of SSX2. The 3 bp immediately 5' to the fusion point could not be assigned to either SYT or SSX2 and may represent an insertion-deletion or a cryptic splicing event. This fragment maintains the reading frame of the chimeric product and encodes a predicted protein larger by 43 amino acids, which nevertheless replaces the region homologous to the transcriptional repression domain Kruppel-associated box, recently recognized in the 5' portion of the SSX genes, with all but the 3' end of the SYT transcript. Thus, a diagnosis of SS may be confirmed in >90% of cases using RT-PCR detection of the chimeric transcript resulting from the t(X;18), and the incidence of molecular variants appears low.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; clinical article; controlled study; human tissue; aged; cancer localization; polymerase chain reaction; proteins; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; neoplasm proteins; transcription, genetic; amino acid sequence; molecular sequence data; gene fusion; base sequence; synovial sarcoma; sarcoma, synovial; repressor proteins; rna, neoplasm; chromosome xp; middle age; chromosome 18q; neoplasms, connective tissue; human; male; female; priority journal; article; chromosome translocation 18; support, non-u.s. gov't; translocation (genetics); chimeric proteins
Journal Title: American Journal of Pathology
Volume: 147
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0002-9440
Publisher: Elsevier Science, Inc.  
Date Published: 1995-12-01
Start Page: 1592
End Page: 1599
Language: English
PUBMED: 7495284
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC1869933
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 28 August 2018 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. William L Gerald
    375 Gerald
  2. Marc Ladanyi
    1326 Ladanyi
  3. Suresh C Jhanwar
    293 Jhanwar
  4. James M Woodruff
    162 Woodruff
  5. Fulvio B Lonardo
    23 Lonardo