Haploinsufficiency of CBFA2 causes familial thrombocytopenia with propensity to develop acute myelogenous leukaemia

WJ Song, MG Sullivan, RD Legare, S Hutchings… - Nature …, 1999 - nature.com
WJ Song, MG Sullivan, RD Legare, S Hutchings, X Tan, D Kufrin, J Ratajczak, IC Resende…
Nature genetics, 1999nature.com
Familial platelet disorder with predisposition to acute myelogenous leukaemia (FPD/AML,
MIM 601399) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by qualitative and
quantitative platelet defects, and propensity to develop acute myelogenous leukaemia
(AML). Informative recombination events in 6 FPD/AML pedigrees with evidence of linkage
to markers on chromosome 21q identified an 880-kb interval containing the disease gene.
Mutational analysis of regional candidate genes showed nonsense mutations or intragenic …
Abstract
Familial platelet disorder with predisposition to acute myelogenous leukaemia (FPD/AML, MIM 601399) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by qualitative and quantitative platelet defects, and propensity to develop acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML). Informative recombination events in 6 FPD/AML pedigrees with evidence of linkage to markers on chromosome 21q identified an 880-kb interval containing the disease gene. Mutational analysis of regional candidate genes showed nonsense mutations or intragenic deletion of one allele of the haematopoietic transcription factor CBFA2 (formerly AML1) that co-segregated with the disease in four FPD/AML pedigrees. We identified heterozygous CBFA2 missense mutations that co-segregated with the disease in the remaining two FPD/AML pedigrees at phylogenetically conserved amino acids R166 and R201, respectively. Analysis of bone marrow or peripheral blood cells from affected FPD/AML individuals showed a decrement in megakaryocyte colony formation, demonstrating that CBFA2 dosage affects megakaryopoiesis. Our findings support a model for FPD/AML in which haploinsufficiency of CBFA2 causes an autosomal dominant congenital platelet defect and predisposes to the acquisition of additional mutations that cause leukaemia.
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