Mutations within the BCL10 gene, a gene involved in apoptosis, have recently been found to occur in a variety of cancers and it was suggested that BCL10 was involved in the pathogenesis of human malignancies. Our investigations of the involvement of this gene in various malignancies, however, do not uphold this suggestion. We would like to propose that, in fact, the original results were obtained as a result of a rare cloning artefact.
We describe two males with congenital ichthyosis secondary to steroid sulphatase deficiency who also manifested delayed puberty with biochemical features of hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism. In the first patient a history of cryptorchidism and the clinical findings of anosmia, micropenis and bimanual synkinesis suggested a contiguous gene syndrome, comprising X-linked Kallmann's syndrome and X-linked ichthyosis. An X-Y chromosomal translocation involving the Xp22.3 locus was identified; deletions of the STS locus and of exons 10-14 of the KAL locus were subsequently demonstrated. The second patient was euosmic and, although the STS locus was deleted in association with a pericentric inversion involving Xp22.3, no deletions were detected at the KAL locus. Clinically, he was felt to have constitutionally delayed puberty rather than hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and this diagnosis was substantiated by his subsequent development.
Notch pathway activation by mutations in either NOTCH1 and/or FBXW7 is one of the most common molecular events in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) and, in pediatric disease, predicts for favorable outcome. Their prognostic significance in adult T-ALL is unclear. We sought to evaluate the outcome according to mutation status of patients with adult T-ALL treated on the United Kingdom Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia XII (UKALLXII)/Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) E2993 protocol.NOTCH1 and FBXW7 were screened by a combination of denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography and sequencing in 88 adult patients with T-ALL treated on the UKALLXII/ECOG E2993 protocol and compared with clinical characteristics and outcome.NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations were common (60% and 18%, respectively) and were not associated with age or WBC count. NOTCH1 heterodimerization domain mutations were associated with FBXW7 mutations (P = .02), and NOTCH1 proline, glutamic acid, serine, threonine (PEST) rich domain and FBXW7 mutations were mutually exclusive. There were an equal number of high- and standard-risk patients in the NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutated (MUT) groups. Patients wild type (WT) for both markers trended toward poorer event-free survival (EFS; MUT v WT, 51% v 27%, P = .10; hazard ratio, 0.6). Analysis by each marker individually was not significantly predictive of outcome (NOTCH1 MUT v WT, EFS 49% v 34%, P = .20; FBXW7 MUT v WT, EFS 53% v 41%, P.72).NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutant-positive patients do not fare sufficiently well to warrant an individualized treatment approach in future studies.
A detailed neurological investigation of patients with Kallmann's syndrome (KS) has been performed in an attempt to relate phenotypic characterization with genotype. Twenty-seven subjects with KS were studied (including 12 males with X-linked disease and 3 females). Six male and 2 female normosmics with isolated GnRH deficiency, 1 male with KS variant, and 1 obligate female carrier were also imaged. Evidence for X-linked disease was derived both from analysis of pedigree and by mutation analysis at the KAL locus. The female carrier and all 8 normosmics had normal olfactory bulbs and sulci, as did 3 male KS. The study, therefore, confirms the value of magnetic resonance imaging in the diagnosis of KS, but suggests that the technique is not sufficiently sensitive to differentiate KS from the normosmic form of GnRH deficiency in all cases. Phenotypic characterization of KS was more effectively achieved by accurate estimation of olfactory status. Three new mutations at the KAL locus were identified, 2 single exon deletions and 1 point mutation. In 2 pedigrees with clear X-linked inheritance, no coding sequence mutations were detected; it may be that these harbor mutations of pKAL, the recently characterized 5'-promoter region. No clear relationship could be established between specific phenotypic anomalies and particular KAL mutations. Involuntary, mirror movements of the upper limbs were present in 10 of 12 cases of X-linked KS, but in none of the other subjects. Although this phenomenon has been ascribed to an abnormality of the corpus callosum, in the present study magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated no quantitative or qualitative morphological anomalies of this structure.