Skip to content
The Kids Research Institute Australia logo
Donate

Discover . Prevent . Cure .

Gain of chromosome 21 in hematological malignancies: lessons from studying leukemia in children with Down syndrome

Structural and numerical alterations of chromosome 21 are extremely common in hematological malignancies. While the functional impact of chimeric transcripts from fused chromosome 21 genes such as TEL-AML1, AML1-ETO, or FUS-ERG have been extensively studied, the role of gain of chromosome 21 remains largely unknown.

Citation:
Laurent AP, Kotecha RS, Malinge S. Gain of chromosome 21 in hematological malignancies: lessons from studying leukemia in children with Down syndrome. Leukemia. 2020;34(8):1984-99.

Keywords:
Animals; Child; Chromosome Aberrations; Chromosomes, Human, Pair 21; Down Syndrome/complications/drug therapy; Epigenesis, Genetic; Humans; Janus Kinase 2/genetics

Abstract:
Structural and numerical alterations of chromosome 21 are extremely common in hematological malignancies. While the functional impact of chimeric transcripts from fused chromosome 21 genes such as TEL-AML1, AML1-ETO, or FUS-ERG have been extensively studied, the role of gain of chromosome 21 remains largely unknown.