SNPs and miRNA, Two Acronyms Used
More and More in Hematology
By Edward Srour, Ph.D.
The Scientific Committees on Pediatric Hematology and Clinical Laboratory Hematology join
together this year to provide ASH attendees a comprehensive overview on MicroRNA as a new player
in hematopoiesis and cancer, and on single nucleotide polymorphisms and their clinical applications.
These sessions are offered at 8:00 and 10:15 a.m., respectively, today, and again at 7:30 and 9:45 a.m.
on Sunday. The MicroRNA session is chaired by Dr. Peter Newburger with Dr. Amy Pasquinelli
discussing the ontogeny and phylogeny of microRNA, Dr. Chang-Zheng Chen presenting how
microRNAs modulate hematopoietic lineage differentiation, and Dr. Carlo Croce summarizing the role
of microRNA genes in human leukemia.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) constitute a group of hundreds of regulatory genes encoded by the
genome of multicellular organisms. In their regulatory functions, miRNAs regulate many biological
processes, including hematopoiesis. Since the targets of miRNA are not well defined, neither are the
mechanisms involved in miRNA-mediated gene regulation. The laboratory of Dr. Pasquinelli studies
the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans in order to identify primary transcripts of specific miRNA
genes to better understand how miRNAs function. In humans, miRNAs are encoded by up to 225
genes, and some are linked to human leukemias such as B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The
laboratory of Dr. Chen cloned about 100 miRNAs from mouse bone marrow in order to determine if
any play a role in the regulation of mammalian hematopoiesis. Many miRNAs were found to be
either lineage or differentiation stage specific, suggesting perhaps critical roles in hematopoiesis and
differentiation. The work of Dr. Croce has focused on identifying the location of many miRNAs and
has determined that, for example, miR-15a and miR-16-1 are located within a small region of loss in
CLL cells suggesting an association between miRNA genes and malignancies. Other locations of
different miRNAs suggest that they may play an important and unanticipated role in cancer.
The Scientific Committee on Clinical Laboratory Hematology session will discuss single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) through the work of Dr. Deborah Nickerson, who will cover the background
and concepts of SNPs, Dr. William Evans, who will speak about pharmacogenomics, and Dr. John
Blangero, who will assess the allelic architecture of thrombosis susceptibility genes. Dr. Nickerson will
provide a wide overview of SNPs and draw on available genome maps to discuss genotype-phenotype
relationships. She will also discuss hotspots of recombinations and regions of natural selection in the
human genome as examples of unusual patterns of variation. Dr. Evans will discuss how SNPs that
have already been associated with pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of many medications may
play an important role in pharmacogenomics. Dr. Evans will outline his approach for utilizing
pharmacogenomics for the examination of polygenic determinants of drug effects in childhood ALL,
and will explain how the expression pattern of genes differentially expressed in ALL can be significantly
related to treatment outcome. In his presentation, Dr. Blangero will use the example of Factor VII
structural gene to describe an investigational path beginning with the localization of a human quantitative
trait loci (QTL) to the complete characterization of the genetic architecture of the QTL and emphasize
how this approach may lead to a comprehensive dissection of human QTLs related to disease risk.
Certainly, both of these sessions will be filled with novel information and will present the audience
with the latest on these two new areas of research. If SNPs and miRNAs are mysteries to you, these
talks will more than get you started on these subjects; if they are familiar terms, you will have a chance
to learn much more.
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