Acute Progression of BCR-FGFR1 Induced Murine B-Lympho/Myeloproliferative Disorder Suggests Involvement of Lineages at the Pro-B Cell Stage

Date

2012-06-6

Authors

Ren, MingQiang
Tidwell, Josephine A.
Sharma, Suash
Cowell, John K.

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Abstract

Constitutive activation of FGFR1, through rearrangement with various dimerization domains, leads to atypical myeloproliferative disorders where, although T cell lymphoma are common, the BCR-FGFR1 chimeric kinase results in CML-like leukemia. As with the human disease, mouse bone marrow transduction/transplantation with BCR-FGFR1 leads to CML-like myeloproliferation as well as B-cell leukemia/lymphoma. The murine disease described in this report is virtually identical to the human disease in that both showed bi-lineage involvement of myeloid and B-cells, splenomegaly, leukocytosis and bone marrow hypercellularity. A CD19+ IgMâ CD43+ immunophenotype was seen both in primary tumors and two cell lines derived from these tumors. In all primary tumors, subpopulations of these CD19+ IgMâ CD43+ were also either B220+ or B220â , suggesting a block in differentiation at the pro-B cell stage. The B220â phenotype was retained in one of the cell lines while the other was B220+. When the two cell lines were transplanted into syngeneic mice, all animals developed the same B-lymphoblastic leukemia within 2-weeks. Thus, the murine model described here closely mimics the human disease with bilineage myeloid and B-cell leukemia/lymphoma which provides a representative model to investigate therapeutic intervention and a better understanding of the etiology of the disease.

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Keywords

Research Article, Biology, Genetics, Cancer Genetics, Cytogenetics, Genetics of Disease, Model Organisms, Animal Models, Mouse, Medicine, Hematology, Hematologic Cancers and Related Disorders, Leukemias, Myeloproliferative Disorders, Oncology, Cancers and Neoplasms

Citation

PLoS One. 2012 Jun 6; 7(6):e38265