The following case study focuses on identifying one of the 5q-
syndrome genes. Test your knowledge by reading the question below and
making the proper selection.
Which of the following genes or pathways was recently implicated in the pathogenesis of 5q- syndrome? Choose one.
- Jak2 tyrosine kinase involved in cytokine signal transduction
- p53 tumor suppressor gene
- Ribosomal subunit protein 14 (RPS14)
- Growth factor oncogene sis encoding for platelet-derived growth factor-beta (PDGF-β)
- FLT3 receptor tyrosine kinase
Answer
- Ribosomal subunit protein 14 (RPS14)
Explanation
The 5q- syndrome is a subtype of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)
characterized by a more indolent clinical course compared with other
MDS subtypes with more complex cytogenetic abnormalities.1
Putative tumor suppressor gene(s) lost in the 5q31-32 region are
thought to be responsible for the hallmark bone marrow features of the
5q- syndrome (i.e., erythroid hypoplasia and dysplastic megakaryocytes).2
At the 2007 ASH Annual Meeting, Dr. Benjamin Ebert, from the laboratory
of Dr. Todd Golub at Harvard Medical School, presented his exciting
discovery that the partial loss of function of the RPS14 in normal
hematopoietic progenitors recapitulates the phenotype of 5q- syndrome.3
Ebert, et al. used RNA-mediated interference, a methodology effective
for targeted gene silencing, against 40 candidate genes in normal
hematopoietic progenitors and screened by FACS analysis for a shift
favoring megakaryocytic differentiation over erythroid differentiation.
Partial knockdown of RPS14 caused the most dramatic shift among the
genes tested. Furthermore, the partial knockdown created a cellular
state of haploinsufficiency, which was sufficient to recapitulate the
morphologic features of the 5q- syndrome, including macrocytic anemia
and erythroid hypoplasia. Conversely, expression of RPS14 in progenitor
cells from patients with 5q- syndrome reversed the characteristic
phenotype and increased erythroid differentiation.
Comparisons were made to Diamond-Blackfan anemia, one of the
inherited bone marrow failure syndromes resulting from
haploinsufficiency of ribosomal protein function.4
Inactivating mutations of RPS19 account for approximately 25 percent of
cases. In other cases, identification of mutations in other ribosomal
protein genes has been reported. (See 2007 ASH Annual Meeting abstracts
#421 and #422.) Similar to 5q- syndrome, it is not clear why erythroid
progenitors are particularly sensitive to ribosomal protein gene
haploinsufficiency. Some have suggested that these proteins are
rate-limiting in erythroid progenitors but not in other hematopoietic
progenitors. However, haploinsufficiency of RSP14 alone may not
recapitulate the 5q- syndrome completely. There is megakaryocyte
dysplasia in 5q- syndrome, which was not reported in the work published
by Ebert, et al. Therefore, loss of multiple tumor suppressor genes on
the 5q arm are likely responsible.
References
- Giagounidis AA, Germing U, Aul C. Biological and Prognostic Significance of Chromosome 5q Deletions in Myeloid Malignancies. Clin Cancer Res. 2006;12:5-10.
- Boultwood J, Fidler C, Strickson AJ, et al. Narrowing and genomic annotation of the commonly deleted region of the 5q- syndrome. Blood. 2002;99:4638-41.
- Ebert BL, Pretz J, Bosco J, et al. Identification of RPS14 as a 5q- syndrome gene by RNA interference screen. Nature. 2008;451:335-9.
- Alter B. Diagnosis, Genetics, and Management of Inherited Bone Marrow Failure Syndromes. Hematology 2007:29-39.
Case study submitted by Kim-Hien Dao, DO, PhD, of the University of California, San Diego.
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