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cDNA cloning, expression pattern, and chromosomal localization of Mlf1, murine homologue of a gene involved in myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukemia

  1. Author:
    Hitzler, J. K.
    Witte, D. P.
    Jenkins, N. A.
    Copeland, N. G.
    Gilbert, D. J.
    Naeve, C. W.
    Look, A. T.
    Morris, S. W.
  2. Author Address

    Morris SW St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Dept Expt Oncol Room 5024,Thomas Tower,332 N Lauderdale St Memphis, TN 38105 USA St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Dept Expt Oncol Memphis, TN 38105 USA St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Dept Hematol Oncol Memphis, TN 38105 USA St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Ctr Biotechnol Memphis, TN 38105 USA Univ Tennessee, Dept Pediat, Coll Med Memphis, TN 38163 USA Univ Cincinnati, Med Ctr, Dept Pediat, Div Pathol Cincinnati, OH 45267 USA NCI, Mammalian Genet Lab, ABL Basic Res Program, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr Frederick, MD 21701 USA
    1. Year: 1999
  1. Journal: American Journal of Pathology
    1. 155
    2. 1
    3. Pages: 53-59
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The NPM-MLF1 fusion protein is expressed in blasts from patients with myelodysplasia/acute myeloid leukemia (MDS/AML) containing the t(3;5) chromosomal rearrangement. Nucleophosmin (NPM), a previously characterized nucleolar phosphoprotein, contributes to two other fusion proteins found in lympho-hematopoietic malignancies, anaplastic large cell lymphoma (NPM-ALK) and acute promyelocytic leukemia (NPM-RAR alpha), By contrast, the function off the carboxy-terminal fusion partner, myelodysplasia/myeloid leukemia factor 1 (MLF1), is unknown. To aid in understanding normal MLF1 function, we isolated the murine cDNA, determined the chromosomal localization of Mlf1, and defined its tissue expression by in situ hybridization, Mlf1 was highly similar to its human homologue (86% and 84% identical nucleotide and amino acid sequence, respectively) and mapped to the central region of chromosome 3, within a segment lacking known mouse mutations. Mlf1 tissue distribution was restricted during both development and postnatal life, with high levels present only in skeletal, cardiac, and selected smooth muscle, gonadal tissues, and rare epithelial tissues including the nasal mucosa and the ependyma/choroid plexus in the brain. Mlf1 transcripts were undetectable in the lympho-hematopoietic organs of both the embryonic and adult mouse, suggesting that NPM-MLF1 contributes to the genesis of MDS/AML in part by enforcing the ectopic overexpression of MLF1 within hematopoietic tissues. [References: 49]

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