Profound parental bias associated with chromosome 14 acquired uniparental disomy indicates targeting of an imprinted locus

A Chase, W Leung, W Tapper, A V Jones, L Knoops, C Rasi, L A Forsberg, P Guglielmelli, K Zoi, V Hall, L Chiecchio, L Eder-Azanza, C Bryant, L Lannfelt, L Docherty, H E White, J Score, D J G Mackay, A M Vannucchi, J P Dumanski & N C P Cross

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Acquired uniparental disomy (aUPD) is a common finding in myeloid malignancies and typically acts to convert a somatically-acquired heterozygous mutation to homozygosity. We sought to identify the target of chromosome 14 aUPD (aUPD14), a recurrent abnormality in myeloid neoplasms and population cohorts of elderly individuals. We identified 29 cases with aUPD14q that defined a minimal affected region (MAR) of 11.2 Mb running from 14q32.12 to the telomere. Exome sequencing (n=7) did not identify recurrently mutated genes, but methylation-specific PCR at the imprinted MEG3-DLK1 locus located within the MAR demonstrated loss of maternal chromosome 14 and gain of paternal chromosome 14 (P<0.0001), with the degree of methylation imbalance correlating with the level of aUPD (r=0.76; P=0.0001). The absence of driver gene mutations in the exomes of 3 individuals with aUPD14q but no known haematological disorder suggests that aUPD14q may be sufficient to drive clonal hemopoiesis. Analysis of cases with both aUPD14q and JAK2 V617F (n=11) indicated that aUPD14q may be an early event in some cases but a late event in others. We conclude that aUPD14q is a recurrent abnormality that targets an imprinted locus and may promote clonal hemopoiesis either as an initiating event or as a secondary change.
Original languageEnglish
JournalLeukemia
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

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