Chromosomal Translocations and Leukaemia Flashcards
What are HSC’s?
are multipotent primitive cells that can develop into all types of blood cells e.g. B/T lymphocytes, granulocytes and macrophages
Where do HSC’s emerge from?
AGM - Aorta-Gonad-Mesonephros
In what organs can you find HSC’s?
Foetal liver, bone marrow and umbilical cord blood
What is self renewal?
allows preservation of the stem cell for lifetime of the organisms
What is Quiescence?
tight regulation to stop superfluous proliferation or to prevent accumulation of mutations (that could cause cancer)
What is apoptosis?
cell death mechanism to eliminate excess cells or damaged cells
What is the role of differentiation or lineage specification?
to produce intermediates that ultimately yield blood and immune cells
What is a hallmark of leukaemogenesis?
Disruption of the balance of differentiation, apoptosis and self renewal e.g. decreased differentiation and apoptosis and increased self renewal.
What are the normal controlling factors in haematopoiesis?
Transcription factors present in the environment or niche which can turn genes in a cell on or off once they are bound to the receptor in the cell membrane.
How does the receptor turn genes on or off after transcription factors have bound?
Phosphorylation, ubiquitination, ATP/GTP and oxidise/reduce
What is the fate choice of a cell once the transcription factors have bound?
Proliferate/self renew
Differentiate
Death/apoptosis
Quiescence
What happens in leukemia?
There is a new constitutively active fusion protein (BCR-ABL) present which activates the signalling pathway within the cell switching on or off the wrong gene and causing over proliferation and out of control cell growth.
What are 4 types of Leukemia?
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL)
Acute lymphocytic leukaemia (ALL)
Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML)
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML)
What is the cytology, clinical picture and prognosis of acute leukaemia?
Large/plastic cells
Patient is sick
grave
What is the cytology, clinical picture and prognosis of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia?
Small lymphocytes
Often incidental findings
Pretty good
What acute leukemia is common in children?
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL)
What acute leukemia is common in old age?
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML)
Why did we find out the molecular basis of leukaemia quicker than that of solid tumours?
- easy to obtain biopsy of blood
- easy to do cytogenetics of blood cells compared to solid tumours
- visible chromosomal changes are apparent in chromosome spread
What percentage of adult cancers and childhood cancer is leukaemia?
5% adults, 50% childhood
What does cytogenetics involve?
G banding patters and chromosome paint to identify any abnormalities in the genome. This is karyotyping and you can use different colours to see this more clearly
What is the philadelphia chromosome?
This is a marker for chronic myeloid leukaemia and is when part of chromosome 22 goes onto chromosome 9, and part of chromosomes 9 goes onto chromosome 22.
Can you diagnose someone using chromosome painting techniques? and if so which ones?
Yes and you could use FISH - you can see the translocation better in anaphase
Is DNA from one chromosome directly linked to the DNA of the other?
Yes
What do some translocations of chromosomes result in?
A selective advantage to the cell
What are cells carrying the translocation more likely to do?
Proliferate
What leukaemia’s are caused by a translocation?
CML, ALL and AML
What are 2 consequences of chromosomal translocations?
Generation of a fusion protein which will have a new cellular function e.g. BCR-ABL (in CML), RUX-ETO (in AML) and MLL-AF4 (in B cell ALL).
Mis-expression of a protein (its expressed in inappropriate cell types) e.g. c-MYC in Burkitts lymphoma