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Published online before print February 14, 2008
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Consultations in Molecular Diagnostics |




From the Department of Pathology,
* Center for Hematologic Malignancies, Cancer Institute,
and Howard Hughes Medical Institute,
Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon
Abstract
Although targeted inhibition of BCR-ABL with imatinib is an effective therapy for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), a minority of patients acquire mutations in the BCR-ABL kinase domain, resulting in imatinib resistance. The spectrum of kinase domain mutations discovered to date is quite heterogeneous, consisting almost exclusively of single nucleotide substitutions affecting key amino acids that regulate drug binding or BCR-ABL function. Here, we describe an alternative kinase domain insertion/truncation mutation in three CML patients undergoing kinase inhibitor therapy. In each of these patients, direct DNA sequencing of BCR-ABL RT-PCR products revealed that the same 35 nucleotides from ABL intron 8 had been inserted at the normal exon 8 to 9 splice junction. This 35-bp intronic sequence was flanked by excellent consensus splice donor and acceptor sequences, suggesting alternative splicing as the likely mutational mechanism. The insertion created a premature translational stop codon after 10 intron-encoded amino acids (amino acid 484). This resulted in truncation of 653 C-terminal amino acids, which included part of the kinase domain and the entire "last exon" region. These findings demonstrate that kinase domain insertions are an alternative (and not entirely uncommon) mutational mechanism in CML patients undergoing kinase inhibitor therapy.
Imatinib is the recommended first line therapy for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) [National Comprehensive Cancer Network Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia. Version 1.2008; last accessed 07/02/07; available at http://www. nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/PDF/cml.pdf; to view the most recent and complete version of the guideline, go online to http://www.nccn.org.]. While on imatinib therapy, more than 80% of patients will achieve a complete cytogenetic response (CCR).1, 2 After CCR is achieved, molecular response, measured by RT-PCR quantification of BCR-ABL transcripts, is typically used to continue therapeutic monitoring and detect loss of response at an early stage, before overt relapse occurs. On standard imatinib therapy, most CCR patients will have residual disease detectable by RT-PCR quantification of BCR-ABL transcripts.3, 4 The most common mechanism for a subsequent loss of response is acquired imatinib resistance due to the development of point mutations in the BCR-ABL kinase domain that interfere with optimal drug-target interactions.5 DNA sequencing of the BCR-ABL kinase domain can determine the presence or absence of such mutations, and since most of these variants are susceptible to alternative kinase inhibitors (dasatinib and/or nilotinib), alternative therapy can be initiated.6, 7 Kinase domain mutations have been detected in the majority of patients with acquired imatinib resistance,8 and over 40 different mutations have been reported.9 Almost all of these mutations are single nucleotide point mutations, with insertions and deletions being rare in previous reports. In comparison, we now report three cases with an identical insertion/truncation mutation in which sequences from ABL intron 8 are aberrantly encoded into the truncated C terminus of the BCR-ABL kinase domain.
Cases
The first case was that of a 15-year-old adolescent initially diagnosed with a leukocyte count of 266,000 (with 4% blasts) and 100% Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome [t(9;22)]-positive metaphases in his bone marrow. The patient began imatinib therapy at a dose of 400 mg per day and rapidly achieved a complete hematological remission, followed by a CCR at 11 months, but with only a 1.3-log reduction in BCR-ABL RNA. After failing to achieve any improvement in his molecular response (1.3-log drop) after 14 months on imatinib (including a dose escalation to 800 mg), he was referred to our institution, where a 17-month sample revealed a significant molecular response (2.8-log drop), but also showed a novel insertion/truncation mutation in the C terminus of the BCR-ABL kinase domain. A 20-month follow-up sample showed a slight (or negligible) increase in disease burden (2.5-log drop), but confirmed a continuing good therapeutic response.
The second case was a 60-year-old man initially diagnosed with a leukocyte count of over 200,000 and 100% Ph+ metaphases in his bone marrow. After six months of imatinib therapy (at 800 mg per day), he achieved a CCR and a 1.9-log reduction in BCR-ABL transcripts. After nine months, his molecular response improved to a 2.4-log drop. However, due to gastrointestinal side effects on the high imatinib dose, transient dose reductions to 400 or 600 mg were necessary. After one year of imatinib treatment, despite normal peripheral blood counts, normal bone marrow morphology, and continued CCR (with normal karyotype), his BCR-ABL RNA level increased to a 1.9-log drop. Because of this 0.5-log rise in BCR-ABL RNA, and the associated higher risk of early, evolving imatinib resistance,10, 11 mutation analysis of the BCR-ABL kinase domain was requested and showed the intron 8 insertion/truncation. Despite continued high-dose imatinib treatment, a 14-month sample showed a slight (if any) increase in BCR-ABL transcripts (1.7-log drop), thus confirming a suboptimal molecular response.
The third case was that of a 50-year-old male diagnosed with a leukocyte count of 233,000, a platelet count of 733,000, and 100% Ph+ bone marrow metaphases. After imatinib therapy was initiated, he quickly achieved a hematological remission, but failed to attain an adequate cytogenetic response. After nine months of imatinib (at increasing doses), he relapsed with 100% Ph-positive bone marrow cells. Although BCR-ABL mutation analysis at that time failed to show any detectable kinase domain mutations, he was switched from imatinib to dasatinib. After nine additional months of dasatinib therapy (with an escalating dose), he finally achieved a major cytogenetic response (20% Ph-positive metaphases), but 3 months later, the cytogenetic response was not improved (25% Ph positivity; 0.7-log reduction in bcr-abl transcripts), and he was referred to our institution for a second opinion. When first seen at our institution (after 13 months of dasatinib), although his cytogenetic and molecular responses were essentially unchanged (25% Ph positivity and a 0.5-log drop in bcr-abl RNA), a new clonal cytogenetic alteration was detectable (trisomy 8 with an extra Y chromosome), suggesting possible disease progression. A bone marrow sample then sent to our laboratory for BCR-ABL kinase domain mutation analysis showed the intron 8 insertion/truncation mutation.
Materials and Methods
Therapeutic response monitoring by cytogenetics and BCR-ABL quantitative RT-PCR were performed as previously described.3
For screening the BCR-ABL kinase domain for mutations, 10 µl of RNA, extracted as previously described from 600,000 leukocytes,3
was reverse transcribed into cDNA (20-µl reaction volume) with SuperScript II (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). BCR-ABL amplicons for direct DNA sequencing (1579 bp for b3a2, 1504 bp for b2a2) were then generated with forward primer BCRF and reverse primer ABLKinaseR as previously described.12
PCR products were run on a 1% agarose gel to confirm amplification and estimate amplicon quantity. Amplicons were purified using the UltraClean PCR Clean-up Kit (MO BIO Laboratories, Carlsbad, CA), and
80 ng of DNA was used for sequencing with the BigDye Terminator v1.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Five primers were used for sequencing: 2F (5'-CGCAACAAGCCCACTGTCT-3'), 1R (5'-CCACTTCGTCTGAGATACTGGAT-3'), MF (5'-ATCCACAGAGATCTTGCTGCC-3'), MR (5'-CCCCTACCAGGCAGTTTCG-3'), and HeinR (5'-AGAACTTGTTGTAGGCCA-3'). The amplicons and sequencing primers were thermocycled for 24 cycles at 96°C for 10 seconds, 50°C for 5 seconds, and 60°C for 4 minutes. Sequencing was carried out on an ABI 3100 capillary electrophoresis instrument using a 50 cm array, and results were analyzed using SeqScape software (Applied Biosystems). Our five sequencing primers encompass the entire BCR-ABL kinase domain (amino acids 234 to 496 of GenBank NM_005157) with redundant coverage.
Results and Discussion
Analysis of the BCR-ABL kinase domain cDNA sequence from all three patients revealed a 35-bp insertion mutation precisely at the exon 8 to 9 splice junction [after nucleotide 1423 (amino acid 475) of GenBank cDNA clone NM_005157]. The identical 35-bp insertion was evident on sequences obtained (in duplicate) using both forward (MF) and reverse (1R) sequencing primers (Figure 1)
. In all three cases, the mutation was co-expressed with wild-type BCR-ABL sequence, as a minority species compared to a predominating wild-type signal in patients 2 and 3, and as an approximate 50–50 mixture in patient 1. The ABL sequence in these three cases is not derived from the untranslocated chromosome 9 c-Abl gene, since the template for DNA sequencing was an RT-PCR product generated with a forward BCR primer together with a reverse ABL primer.
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In summary, we describe three CML patients undergoing tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy, all of whom express the same unique BCR-ABL insertion/truncation mutation: the insertion of 35 bp from intron 8 into the C terminus of the kinase domain. Although aberrant RNA splicing is likely responsible for creating this variant, no specific nucleotide sequence substitutions were detected in the expressed cDNA sequences. These three insertion mutation cases were detected in our diagnostic clinical molecular pathology laboratory after sequencing 174 cases referred to us for suspected imatinib resistance, 78 of which (45%) contained a detectable mutation. The estimated prevalence of the exon 8/9 insertion/truncation mutation is then approximately 1.7% among patients with suspected drug resistance, and this mutation constitutes approximately 3.8% of all mutations. In comparison, previously described acquired mutations in BCR-ABL conferring putative imatinib resistance, have virtually always been point mutations.9 Although we do not yet know whether this insertion/truncation mutation is associated with imatinib resistance (or other specific functional alterations), laboratories that routinely screen the BCR-ABL kinase domain for possible drug resistance mutations should be aware that point mutations are not the only sequence variants to be found.
Footnotes
Address reprint requests to: Richard D. Press, Department of Pathology, L113, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, Portland, OR 97201. E-mail: pressr{at}ohsu.edu
Supported, in part, by National Institutes of Health grants R21 CA095203 (to R.D.P.) and HL082978-01 (to M.W.D.), the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation (to B.J.D.), and the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (to B.J.D. and M.W.D.).
Accepted for publication October 9, 2007.
References
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