Human chromosomal translocations at CpG sites and a theoretical basis for their lineage and stage specificity

Tsai, Albert G. ; Lu, Haihui ; Raghavan, Sathees C. ; Muschen, Markus ; Hsieh, Chih-Lin ; Lieber, Michael R. (2008) Human chromosomal translocations at CpG sites and a theoretical basis for their lineage and stage specificity Cell, 135 (6). pp. 1130-1142. ISSN 0092-8674

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Official URL: http://www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674(08)01372-X

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2008.10.035

Abstract

We have assembled, annotated, and analyzed a database of over 1700 breakpoints from the most common chromosomal rearrangements in human leukemias and lymphomas. Using this database, we show that although the CpG dinucleotide constitutes only 1% of the human genome, it accounts for 40%–70% of breakpoints at pro-B/pre-B stage translocation regions—specifically, those near the bcl-2, bcl-1, and E2A genes. We do not observe CpG hotspots in rearrangements involving lymphoid-myeloid progenitors, mature B cells, or T cells. The stage specificity, lineage specificity, CpG targeting, and unique breakpoint distributions at these cluster regions may be explained by a lesion-specific double-strand breakage mechanism involving the RAG complex acting at AID-deaminated methyl-CpGs.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier.
Keywords:DNA; Proteins; Humdisease
ID Code:103899
Deposited On:04 Apr 2017 09:54
Last Modified:01 Feb 2018 10:10

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