CML Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

philadelphia chromosome

A

t(9;22) creates new gene encoding constitutively active tyrosine kinase

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2
Q

tx CML

A

Targeted molecular therapy based on mechanism: tyrosine kinase inhibitors, Imatinib

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3
Q

stem cell

A

Undergoes self renewal Pluripotent- capable of generating all lineages Capable of proliferation

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4
Q

progenitor cells

A

Capable of proliferation but not self renewal.
Multipotent- can generate more than one lineage.
Capacity becomes narrower as progress down pathway.

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5
Q

committed cells

A

Do not proliferate.

Only one fate, to generate the next step in the path to the neutrophil.

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6
Q

BCR-ABL1 genomic translocation in what cell

A

HSC

mutation passed down to all progeny

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7
Q

what does BCR-ABL1 mutation create

A

Genetic chimera of parts of BCR gene and ABL1 gene–> constitutively active TK that activates proliferation and blocks apoptosis in absence of extracellular signals

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8
Q

what does BCR-ABL1 confer to mutated cells (vs. normal cells)

A

Selective advantage for progenitor cells
- can proliferate more, survive longer, can acquire more mutations to become more oncogenic

Cannot self-renew, CAN continue to differentiate

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9
Q

outcome of BCR-ABL mutation in general in chronic phase

A

expansion of progenitor and committed cells, mature cells still produced
disease relatively mild

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10
Q

blast phase mutations and outcome

A

GMP acquires ability to self renew (Wnt-b catenin signaling activated), acquires block to differentiation (translation of CEBPa inhibited)

huge expansion of blasts, 30% extramedullary

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11
Q

mechanism of BCR-ABL1 translocation

A

double stranded breaks occur in 2 chromosomes at specific breakpoints
NHEJ – ends of different chromosomes are joined

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12
Q

two most common breakpoints

A

p210 found in CML, most common

p190 found in some ALL, less common

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13
Q

Normal BCR

A

Ser/Thr kinase domain
role in inhibition of some inflammatory responses
key functional domains for oncogenic fusion protein (coiled-coil domain, tyrosine 177)

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14
Q

ABL1 normal

A

tyrosine kinase = key functional domain for both normal and oncogenic fusion protein
in normal - inactive unless activated by external signals
long chain FA myristate maintains inhibition

functions in DNA repair, cytoskeletal organization

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15
Q

differences between BCR-ABL1 and normal genes

A

Both ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 are tyrosine kinases
But ABL1 is normally inactive unless signaled, BCR-ABL1 is constitutively active
ABL1 mainly nuclear, BCR-ABL1 mainly cytoplasmic
Activate different signaling pathways

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16
Q

Differences in structural changes in BCR ABL1

A

Coiled-coil domain from BCR promotes dimerization (required for activation)
Myristate attachment site lost from ABL1 (normal method of autoinhibition)
Tyrosine 177 added from BCR - phosophorylation of Y-177 creates new binding site for intracellular signaling proteins

17
Q

Y177 subject to tyrosine phosphorylation in BCR-ABL fusion protein but not in BCR protein why

A

BCR is not a tyrosine kinase

18
Q

what does BCR-ABL activate to lead to proliferation and anti-apoptosis

A

Stat5

19
Q

what does imatinib block

A

Imatinib specifically inactivates ABL1 kinase by blocking ATP binding .

20
Q

Imatinib and oncogenic cells selective advantage

A

Imatinib prevents selective advantage that comes from activated oncogenic signaling pathways
Also causes apoptosis (BCR-ABL cells dependent on BCR-ABL)
Loss of BCR-ABL mutant cells allow normal cells to repopulate

21
Q

limitations of imatinib

A
  1. Many develop secondary resistance to imatinib d/t mutations in BCR-ABL
  2. BCR-ABL1 TKIs not effective in blast phase (cells now independent of BCR-ABL)
  3. CML Stem cells are resistant to TKIs (must take for life)
22
Q

If mutation in HSC, why is CML in neutrophil lineage?

A

Model- Specific signaling opportunities created by BCR-ABL protein benefit neutrophil progenitors more than others.